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^Jewish Floridian
Combining THE JEWISH UNITY and THE JEWISH WUKLY
38 Number 18
Miami, Florida. Friday, April 30. 1965
Three Sections Price 2C<
Ecumenical Statement
In Vast Revision Now
tuns. CHARLES flUKELSTEIN
BISHOP COLEMAN f. CARROLL
iisliop Carroll, Mrs.
[inkelstein Chosen
Outstanding Citizens'
riNENTAI CONGRESS'
/Y Nixes
Bishop ColcUMUl F. Carroll and
Mrs. CAailss Finkelstein were Wed-
nesday selected as D.ide County's
lutstanding Citizens lor 1964.
'IV ]8t'.i annual presentation was
nadc Wednesday before a capacity
uoon luncheon at the Everglades
NEW YORK (JTAi Lead
ers of American Jewry wete
shocked and highly disappointed
this week to learn that the draft
declaration approved at the Ecu-
menical Council last November,
exonerating the Jew's >t any col-
lective responsibility for the cru-
cifixion cl Jesus, had been drast-
ically revised by an ad hoc com-
mission ol four at toe Vatican, de-
spite the tact that it was adopted
at the Council by a vole ol 1,992 to
99.
The declaration, as adopted last
November against the opposition of
ultra-conservative prelates and
Bishops from the Arab states, had
stated clearly that no blame lor
the death of Jesus could be attrib-
uted to the Jewish people alive in
the days of Jesus and '"much less1
to the Jews of today. However,
that draft must be considered for
final adoption at the next session
of the Ecumenical Council, schc I-
uled to convene Sept. 17. before it
is promulgated as official Catho-
lic Church doctrine.
Continued on Page 11 A
* -tt
CARD1NAI A IN COMMAND
30 Bishops Plan Meeting
For Final Draft Writing
ROME(JTA) The Vatican's
Secretariat fe ; Christian Unity,
headed by Cardinal Bea. has exclu-
sive jurisdiction aver the handling
id the Declaration on Church Re-
lations with Non-Christians, a
spokesman for the Bea secretariat
declared here Sunday.
The statement was an obvious re-
sponse to dispaU.'ies from Rome
Sunday, which reported tha. an ad
hoe commission of prelates has
been planning drastic revisions of
file D e e la r a t i o n, preliminarily
;:.iopt( i'la t Novi Tiber by the third
session if ,h,- Ecumenical Council.
The Declaration as passed in No-
Continued on Page 6-A
uio vide
mfab Nod
|S ixti i o N (JTA)
|l : \mer an Revolu.
Ith "Continental
ted this week
But ising United States
il ihe United Nations
pti in oi i lenocide.
vote on the convention,
itlaw the destruc-
u i- .i- I racial minori-
i 12 I 134. The resolu-
M"-' I tin S.-nate to continue
: i" ratifj the treaty. It has
|p n ii. b; tore the Senate
years, althou.'i ratified bv
Continued on Page 8-A
Hotel. Florida Secretary of State
rom Adams was guest speaker.
Presiding at the function was
Sanford Swerdlin, permanent se.-
cretary of the Culstanding Citi-
zens Award Alumni Committee.
Mikirg the presentations was
Jcseph Liptcn, president of Dade
Federal Savings and Loan Asso-
ciation, annual patron.
Sholem Lodge of B'nai B'rith,
.Milton Hahn, president, is sponsor
i the yeai ly event.
Bishi p Cain II was named to re
c-tive the award "for his Inspiring
leadci .'up in the field ol human re-
lations" Bishop Carroll. 60. is a
native ol Pittsburgh. As first bish p
Cl the new Diocc.-c ol Miami, form-
uly a part of the Diocese of St.
Augustine, he tcck on the gigantic-
Continued on Page U*
World Leaders Recall
Warsaw Ghetto Battle
\ockwell Throws His Hat
Va. Governor's Ring
BMAXD. Va. (JTA) -
Rockwell, head of the
lean Xa/i Party, will be quali-
I run ;- a candidate for Gov-
|"f Virginia in the November
p'ls ii the 255 petitions.pn his
arc ic ;md to be registered
l mi i. siate authorities
Ith eck.
Davis, i xecutive secretary
Bi nil ii Elections,
II 'I would be qualified
Pt t" the validity of the names
P-'tilion. The support of 2">0
d v ters is required.
JCkwell't petitions were sign-
|V 235 citiiens. Rockwell said
he would obtain additional signa-
tures s precaution, in case
seme of the names already sub-
mitted are found to be unquali-
fied. He filed as an independent
candidate, rather than on an
openly-proclaimed Naii Party
ticket.
Seme surprise a s expressed
ii the state capital that 255 Vir-
ginians were apparently willing to
dvecate a candidate who is iden-
tified with Nazi m and anti-Se-
mitism.
Wli'le an extremist fringe was
known to secretly back the Nazi.
il was not thought that so many
n i- ma vou'd sign his petition.
said Dr. Lcebke, "will be proven
by deeds alone. What happened
under Hitler was not done with
Ihe knowledge or under the in-
struction of the German people,
but in our name. If Germany
should fail a second time, then
nobody could use the excuse that
he knew nothing about what
went on."
Leaders of the French Govern-
ment, including President Charles
de Gaulle, toak part in Paris on
Sunday in commemorative services
marking the 20th anniversary of
,;, pants in he meeting were rep- ; ,ibtMa(ion o( many of ,he Nazi
rc-sentatives ot anti-.\azi and re- ,
latanc fighters associations from : concer.Nation camps. Gen. de
virtually every free country in Eu. Gaulle attended special services at
rope A separate ceremony was Nctre Dame Cathedral while Prime
held later at a in niuneiit dedi-
cated :o the 30.000 Jews who lost
their lives in Bergen-Belsen camp.
BONN (JTA) West Herman
President II sinrich Luebke declar-
ed here Sunday that trials of Nazi
war criminals must c; n.inue and
thai "no rcpu -ins ol the truth
ol what happened under the Nazi
regime c uld in lp. because the
world realizes that Germany mi i
( usly desires to repent, and the
ueiid has confide nee today in the
new Germany."
President Luebke was the prin-
cipal speaker at a rally commemo-
. lating the 20" ii anniversary of the
Id ration of the Bergen-Belsen con-
centration camp. Among the par-
"Self-purification in Germany,"
Minister Georges Pompidou and
twe other members of the Cabinet
parti, ipated in rites conducted at
Continued on Page 13-A
AUGUSTIN CARDINAL BtA
Bourguiba 9s
Call Disrupts
Arab Unity
JERUSALEM< JTA >The state-
i. cuts i .led by Tunisian President
l'-bib Bourguiba, calling for peace
talks between the Arab states and
Isu'l. have "disrupted the Arab
Bummit atmosphere," the daily
newspaper E! Hayat. ol Beirut, de-
clared this week. Bourgulba's peace
proposals, said Ihe newspaper,
"pose the question whether Leb-
:.non can risk the dangers inherent
Continued on Page 5-A
Bond Drive Opens on Sunday
SEE INOtPtNDtNCt SUPPLEMENT PAGE 8-9-C
Greater Miami will celebrate the
anniversary cf Israel's 17th year :f
statehood at an Israel Independ-
ence n.iy Dinner [his Sunday even-
ing at the Fontaincbleau Hotel.
'1'ie dinner will be the occasion
for the official inauguration
Rabbi Leon Kroni-h as chairman
fyar
ISRAEL'S SEVENTEENTH ANNIVERSARY OF INDEPENDENCE ISSUE
5... 1948-1965 ...
ol th- Greater Miami Israel Bond
Organization, and f::r the presenta-
tion t i Leonard Rosen whom Rabbi
Kru::i.-h succeeds, with the Chair-
man of the Year Award, a distinc-
tion which singles him out from
Inmor->3 Israel Bond leaders in tJ2
countries.
The award to Rosen, "in rec-
ognition of his dynamic role in
carying Miami's Bond sales to
record levels," will be made by
E. Zev Sufott, emissary of the
State el Israel.
Sufott will also conduct the in-
auguration ceremonies of Rabbi
Ki mish.
cuest speaker will be U.S. Sen.
.! :in 0. Pastore, Ol Rhode Is-land.
a leading champion ol Israel in
the Senate, and Chairman of the
Joint Congressional Committee on
Atomic Energy, who was Presi-
dent Lyndon B. Johnsons personal
choice as keynote -peaker at the
Democratic Party National Conven-
lh n las; si nimcr.
A coterie of distinguished com-
munity leaders heads t ie Israel In-
dependence Day Dinner Commit-
tee. spearheaded by Chairman
Leonard Rosen: honorary chair-
Continued on Page 5-A

Pcce 2-A
-J&tstthrHSar

Consul General Extends Greetings
On Occasion of Israel's 17th Anniversary
$i isiAii motrvtoitKt surtiimin ... sk. c
..! General Stuaica Y
of the Israel Consulate for the
S --heast Region vf the United
..-.is *eek extended greet-
mgs on the occa-ioe of his ctur.
try ? 17th anniversar> of indep-
endence.
From his eonsiJar office* in At-
lanta Ga Mr Ya. = r<2
tha: seventeen >ear is a short
apan in the life of a nauon.
"Israel can safely sey tHet it
ha* made need ere"y
of these years. Jews all ever the
world whe want te, or hae to,
can com* to Israel's shores and
be free and telf-resatectinej citi-
zens. Since 1*41, Israel has quad-
rupled its population, and still
there is a steady flow of immi-
grants.
"'A fine army euarantees the se-
curity of the country and the ?a-t
Pierre Mande
Quartet Slated
Pierre Mande Stnnc Quartet ail]
be featured at a performance in
the Miami Public Library Thurs-
day. May 6 at i '.S p.m.
Perform:- iitista are Pierre
Mande violin Lnth Ridsdale. %
Albert J Gottlieb, viola.
ivo L* Zazzexa cello.
lude works bj
Felix Mi .-. Eduoard L
Gabriel (nd Cavade De-

ano a ?&*rA
science and arts have already found
rational recognition.
"Lsrael has become a eer.ter for
Jewish culture, and the Bible ha;
come alKe again in sciiooej rr.
life. Immigrants
wherever they may cr.me. kaom
their Bible: tfus is the ban? f
which they star: their way to good,
democratic Israel cstizer.^hi:
Iraef. together with rt imm.-
praati r.k- dM iea-T.ed the -
of developing human resource-;
This knowledge, so urgently ner-i
ed in a Urge part of the world
has enabled Israel to give a help-
ing hand to many of the yampm
cation ia Ktiriaa; their mest press-
iag problems
"Se while still in the middle o*
th process ef developing, Israel
is a partner of the free world in
helping with its own brand of
Peace Corps' work in leading the
world to true democracy.
The '.Tth birthday of Israel
should be a daj of pride for all
who are near us and who will be
*rs to come
May this Independence day be
I -ii;. :' .-
State Dept. Will Drop Question
iMIMOH TAUON
Walker Heads Campaign
Paul S Walker, president of
Richard; Department Store, and
vie*- : Stores Com-
pan* has been appointed chair-
man of the 1K5 Savings Bood>
campaign in Dade County it as
announced last week by Victor H
Northcutt. adMSor. chairman of the
WASH1KGT0N iJTA The
State Department -..
:- y p*>choiog-
cal" test?
u. aaaatar tr^e or false u.
-jc'r. i.-'iTJ ai "Christ per-
formed nuracie*."
Questions on the di%inr
Canst and theological concepts
pertaining to Christianity were
cosed in deciding suitability of per
soanel for overseas assignment
Responding to protests from Coc-
ress. the State Departmeat wrote
Rep Cornelius Gallagher. New
Jersey Democrat, that "effective
immediate.) we have diseoatir.
ned this potk> Rep Gallagher
chairman of a Government Opera-
tions Subcommittee, had warned
the Department he planned a spe
dal investigation into its ~mstd-
HEBREW SCHOOL
BAK MITZVAH
TEACHER AVAILABLE
Five Tears fiariari
ia Teecaiee Field. H t-aeyt)
-
' af I
CELEBRATE ISRAEL
INDEPENDENCE DAY. .
BUY AN ISRAEL BOND.
lateysaie Frieeeera 50*-4**9
THE RELIGIOUS ZIONISTS OF AMERICA
MIZRACHI HA'POAL MIZRACHI
e *c

L'ation of imperial importance is made to Samuel Pol-
co-chairman of the Imperial House Combined Jewish-
Bi campaign, is shown here receivinq a citation for
jidinq volunteer services from John N. Serbin, chairman
lidents ot Combined Jewish Appeal. Pollock obtained 'he
r.ew contribution received by any volunteer in the 1965
uan.
AT $1,287,450 LiVE L NOW
lined Jewish Appeal Runs Whopping
'ercent Ahead With Month to Go
TWO LEADERS DUE FOR CITATION PACE 12-A
Combined Jewish Ap-
paign. with less than a
, go, is running 10 percent
last year, with $1,287,450
nitions received prior to
it was announced by Dr.
ehrnian. campaign chair-
rampaiiin closing dinner on
lean truly be a victory din-
]e mainlain this outstanding
m by so doing reach our
|j 4,l").o80 on behalf of CJA's
mee both at home and
I' the chairman stated.
jbate, the increase in both
Ber of contributions nd
in the amount raised has been
most heartening to all of us. We
can point with pride to the fact
that with almost a month left in
the campaign we have already
surpassed our 1963 total cam-
paign total of $1,286,500, and r
well on the road toward better-
ing last year's goal which, was
$100,000 above that raised in
1963.
"It is important, too. we realize
that the 1965 goal is an additional
S50.000 above this figure and is the
bare minimum necessary for Com-
bined Jewish Appeals 41 agencies
to meet their commitments to th
community and to the United Jew-
ish Appeal and its agencies over-
seas.
"More and more people are join-
ing in support of our annual cam-
paign, as can readily be seen by
the number of contributions we
have received thus far. already
equaling the 9.700 total pledges'
made in last year's campaign.
"The goal is well within sight.
However, it is this final phase of ,
the campaign which will provide
vital assurance that our campaign
will succeed in reaching the goal
chosen by the Executive Commit-
tee, the Campaign Cabinet, and the
Board of Governors of our Greater
Miami Jewish Federation.
"Our dedicated workers realize
that there are many outstanding
cards t<> be covered in all campaign
divisions before May 22. It mUS4 be
OUT resolution t:> point our work
toward going over the top in the
next month so that our Victory
Dinner the end ot May will truly
be an outstanding occasion.
"Many new contributions can
be obtained if our volunteer work-
ers contact their prospects and
tell them of CJA's needs both at
home and abroad," the chairman
stated.
"Whether it is those we know in
the local community who need the
services of the Jewish Family and
Children's Service, of Mt. Sinai
Hospital, of the Bureau of Jewish
Education, of the Jewish Voca-
tional Service, of the Jewish Home
for the Aged, the YM and YWHA.
or those overseas who count upon
the United Jewish Appeal and its
agencies for new life and freedom,
we must not fail them in their hour
of need.
"A new life and new hope is vita
to all who call upon Combined
Jewish Appeal, and as chairman, I
know that we have received new
inspiration through the retelling of
the ancient Passover story, and will
have this in our mind as we all go
to see our remaining prospects. It
is not a large job if everyone does
his share.
"The time is now. The cam-
paign is drawing to a close, and
I can not too strongly urge every-
one to join in making this an out-
standing success by going over
our goal on behalf of those whose
needs must be met. We are opti-
mistic and have planned a Vic-
tory Dinner," he stated.
"However, it is in the hands of
my friends and neighbors in the
community if the,campaign is to (
end by going over the goal for the [
second year in a row. I know that
I you are dedicated to the welfare
Of your fellow man. and I am cer-
tain that once again I will have the
lull cooperation ot all in this treat
humanitarian endeavor."
pOfc
pytatr "aus ftnev sin
BETH DIN OFFICE
RABBI DR. TIBOR H. STERN
1S32 Washington Ave., Miami Bch.
JE 1-1969 534-0271
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DAY WORKERS $6 FARE
HIGH TYPE WEEKLY MAIDS
RESTAURANT & HOTEL HELP <
All other
Canadian whiskies
are defeated at
Waterloo!
(Home of Seagram's V.O.)
Our strategy:
To make the best
whisky in the world.
That's why
Seagram's V.O.
does for you what no
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It defines smooth once
and for all. Light? Of course.
m IN WHISM-A BUNO OF SELECIEp WHISKIES. SIX YEUS 010. 86.8 PDOOF. SEAGRAM OISIILLERS CO., N.Y.C.
Love
notes from
the sky
via
grapefruit
Glenn Curtisopenedan aviation jcfcool
on a stretch of land near the bay for
training pilots during World War I.
One of his eager young pilots thought
of a novel way of delivering a love
note to his girl. He tied it to a grape-
fruit and dropped it over her home.
He had no idea it would go dear
through the roof! Residents were little
impressed with the first air mail
delivery in the area and the school
moved out to what is now Hialeah.
The Marines landed, took over the
training facilities and thus the Marine
Air Force was born...on Miami
Beach, now 50 years young.
remembered by
tki bank at the head of the Hal
Mercantile
National Bank
of Miami Beach
Member of FDIC
WKHINCTON VE ? I1C0W ROM) MUl

I jge 4-A
+Jmlst> fUrkti&r
"Jewish Floridian
OFFICE and PLANT 120 N.E. Sixth Street
Telephone FR 3-4605
Teletype Communications Miami TWX
305-696-4869
PHED K. SHOCHET._...........Editor and Publisher
LEO MINDLIN..............................Executive Editor
BELMA M. THOMPSON........Asst. to. Publisher
The It*Wi KlnridJan iota mi puairantra live Kaafcnuk
f Ihf ml*-.- R4W1M f*-*! In ka column*.
Published everv Frt<1ajr since 1:7 by The Jewish PlotldUa
at 120 N.E. Sl\th Street. Miami 1. Florida.
Second-Clai-s Postage Paid at Miami. Florida.
Th Jewish Floridian has absoroed the Jewish Unity a
the Jewish Weekly. Member of the Jewish Telegraphta
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Volume 38 Number 18
Friday. April 30. 1965
28 Nisan 5725
Israel's Seventeenth
Anniversary Event
The 17th anniversary cf the
S-.ate of Israel falls next Thursday,
May 6. The fifth dav of the He-
v month of Iyar marks the estab-
ir.en* of the modern Jewish re-
public, which was forqed out of the
cshes of the desiimated Jewish com-
inity of.Europe back in 19-18.
Since then, we have seen a mi-
uious achievement in ncticn-
ildinq that is almost unprecedent-
ec in our time. Sec. C of this weeks
ition of The Jewish Floridian is
dediccted *o this achievement
Founded upon the tentative de-
v- .opment of the earlier Yishuv in
Palestine, the State of Israel has
evolved as a model of democratic
society in the Middle East, as a
tc acher for the newly-emerqinq Af-
m nations, as a siqn of 'he human
will io succeed for indiqent oeooles
everywhere, and as a harbrinqer of
faith fulfilled for the two-thousand-
year-Ionq Zionist dream.
Politically sound, economically
vigorous and militarily watchful, Is-
rcel today holds upward of forty-
million hostile Arab peoples at bay, even as
she moves forward on a variety of fronts at
home.
I* is in the nature of the reality of our time
that we would be indulginq in purposeless
fcncy to imaqine just how much more Israel
might achieve were there no qovernments else-
v here quite frankly dedicated to her destruc-
tion. Despite this unhappy dedication, the Jew-
ish S'ate year by year scores solid advances in
the major task of ingatherinq of Jewish immi-
crants from lands of want and persecution end
in inteqratinq them into the life of a younq na-
jon grateful for every resource, particularly
human, that helps add to the manifold qoals of
progress and prosperi'y.
On the occasion of the seventeenth anni-
versary of the State, we hopefully anticipate
further evidence of q r o w t h and, above all,
peace in the name of Israel's just riqht to ex-
igence in the world family.
Bond Drive Launching
The Israel Bond Organization ^t Greater
liami will launch its new campaiqn here at
a 17th anniversary Israel independence cele-
ition Sunday evening ct the Fontainebleau
Hotel.
The launching will serve a third purpose
cs well: the installation of Rabbi Leon Kronish
new chairman of the bond organization here.
Miami will have just cause for joyous par-
ipa'ion in the Sunday event. Our commun-
ity can once again set its sights, upon remain-
ing the highest per capita purchasers of Israel
Bonds, while at the same time celebratinq Is-
rael's 17th year as a soveriqn nation.
Under Rabbi Kronish, whose reputation as
a lecder in Jewish affairs also includes his top
echelon position in the national bond drive.
Greater Miami can hope for even greater sales
achievements than before.
Israel Bond investment funds, linked to
the 17th anniversary dinner, particularly under-
score the contribution bonds have made to
he upbuilding of the Jewish State. The Sun-
day event should happily link all these causes
for celebration in one of Greater Miami's best
fcond drive launchings ever
1,
Broken Egg Politics
Habib Bourguiba has blown hot and cold on
Israel throughout his career as President of Tu-
.sia. There was a time when he spoke warm-
Jy of the Jewish State, and advised leaders of
the Arab nations to recognize the realities of
Middle East politics.
There was a time when he vied with Gamal
Abdel Nasser of Egypt in his anqry vows to join
any cempaign aimed at pushinq Israel into the
sea.
Now, once again, he is urging 'he Arabs
to give up their hope of crushing the Jewish
State. He is. in fact, proposing immediate peace
talks in some neutral capital.
There is a hitch. Habib Bourauiba want?
Israel first to accept the United Nations parti-
tion recommendation of 1947.
This is about as impossible as Mr. Nasser
is likely to achieve his prime hope for Israel
in the foreseeable future. What Mr. Bourquiba
expects to qain is difficult to understand a'
the moment, although it certainlv seems clear
thct he voices the private sentiments of many
Arab leaders who fear openly to express simi-
lar sentimen's themselves.
Whatever his own reasons, as Israel Deputy
Prime Minister Abba Eban put it early this
week, Habib Bourguiba is d?alinq in the poli-
tics cf broken eqgs.
Outstanding Citizens
The presentation of Dc.d= County 8 Out-
standing Citizens Awards to Bishop Coieman
F. Carroll and Mrs. Charles Finkelstein this
week emphasizes the high significance of the
awards since their incep'ion by Sholem Lodqe
of B nai B'rith eighteen years ago.
Eishop Cairoll. since his installation here
in 1953 to head the then new Miami Diocese,
has been a vital element in our community's
exemplary intergroup relations picture.
Among other things, the Bishop con'ributed
vitally to the establishment here in 1963 of the
Metro Community Relations Board. As a con-
sequence, Dade County was sinqled out by
the late President Kennedy for its exemplary
effor's, particularly in interracial affairs.
Mrs. Finkelstein's contributions to Greater
Miami's civic and communal life are leqion.
They span the broad gamut from teen-aqe wel-
fare throuqh her participation in the Girl Scout
movement to civil riahts and human better-
men* as president o fthe Greater Miami Chap-
ter of the American Jewish Committee.
Both recipients exemplify the noble pur-
pose of the Dade County Outstandinq Citizens
Awards. Bishop Carroll and Mrs. Finkelstein
have enriched Dade County by their unselfish
and unstintinq labor in behalf of their com-
muni'y.
during
the week
as i see it
by LEO MINDLIN
mam

to the recent ^
conference on w
"Nested thaTth^
on of Greater M
th*.C"nfencei5R)l
be: Why was the conference notably be'ref, 0f,t *"?** **
we have come to expect as representing the am^ ** *f
There are. of course, some intewganiiatVAT, four
t.on. Specifically they relate to the chSdef I "*"*'* toT
a Cue here is that the Amencan JeS'o?; ^*
major role in the South Florida Conference hii **m}
These considerations are Interesting ih. ,
are less significant than the unhappy fact th L L es *t
as the fate of Jhr.e-m.ll.on Jew, imrmil,,/'.". .^"I-fl
Curtain baa fa.led to move Miami in '. ,he ^f
way. Crit.cs of this viewpoint will be qmck\' 7*'^
ference at Temple Israel was merelv the .l?- ,ha *3
Of planning sessions hardly intended foi -"""i of i|
munity participation, and that the best |j, IM*t
I hardly think so. Henry Siegman ." .
Relations Advisor) Council, who spok. : l0BV
Purposeless pessimism to assume that rail* TlM
indignation demonstrations fall shod ?Wit*i,
the Soviet Union's blatantly anti-Sei ly **
citizens i indicated here last Heel ."'Clt5*
man is undoubtedly correct I
-:- -:-
THt MIAHS Of POLITICAL PRtSSURl
AT least, Mr Siegman is correct ii
I nion has shown incr. **
menu ol it- policies including I
'iif l Fear of Red China. wh i .
leal phenomenon -
and in lependence of rum:,,;- ..-
spokesmen -how a developing lack '
?......n P ,;,;' s Mr Siegman bin "
book. Judaism With iui Emtx II
withdrew following the vocifen -
- rtitism Particular!) here, extra-S
ount ol strength in the
line. "
But the truth also is thai we have .
in human atia.r* when demonstrations
adequate to the task of reshaping the ini
ernmental powers. These techniques, en p
Igencies of our own civil rights problem : a doobt
teethe at home Imagine, however the n us .-:;
demonstrations carried on abroad to inl ornate n
situations What effect won!! the) have
Understood in these terms, it won; Study tttl
that are employed today to move toi
Issue is a .ain a case in point Wl
action elsewhere to our primitive social attitu -
we project ourselves as leaders of the fn
our nation is racked by race riots In lee
ately to the new African nations, and we i
us beneath fearfully veiled eytu
PURPOSl Or SOVItT ANTISfMITISm
IT IS, of course, true that mass Civil r.
ute to attracting world attention But ti-
the fringe benefit does not take the place
which aims mainly at domestic press
anti-Semitism is concerned, there are m ......rays of Si
nit; world attention, as the boomerai
bellishment" has already su (ested I
methods to which we in a free societ;
sarilj the same as those best reser ed for I talitananis
nation hk. the Soviet Union's
These arc not new considerations n
call- to mind similar protest meet in petitions
which influenced little n any of Hith r's
same rules appl) to.lay. where 111" S net
i.-li citizens is no less political!) motivate
far more rational. Third Reich anti-Sei
ol thing HiUer foresaw the Boh evik I
with Judaism, and fired up his cremal
Other elements, ef course, wen
this ni, i a .;.- seism :; i ;
..ii.I .. tianity in general, both ol
daism
In the Soviet Union, Um precedent
historic and deep-rooted than it was Ii
was supposed to have dealt harsl
anti-Semitism baa remained as a phen
the "social" and habitual reasons that n
even Khrushchev Indeed, the political i
than that to winch Hitler could ever
NIUTKAUZATION tfTOKTS AM UNDtRSTANDABLL
B-NOUGH EVIDENCE appears to exist thai Soviet Je*
E the Revolution, have assumed the role ol i -!,ul1 ,"[!
elements in the nation's larger social structure Tne> --' 0B,_sJJ
give up their specifically Jewish identity for a Com"r^
they hold tenaciouslv to their tradition, shunning t
process, which would make of all Soviet citizens a nion
linwprld. in ,hf*|
In this sense. Jews are hence an irritant, a ?I'. ^nois*!
f.Uing of Moscow s ideological pie. Certainly AdoU ""^ (]
such a problem with his Jewish communit> many ot toIa]ltarusi
would gladly have been a proud part ot his arrogam ^(jj
providing it were not also racist. Russian Jews al
cant enough extent, seem leas willing >iaif "^"1
Seen in these terms, the closing of syi pa;*
to nurture schools where future rabbi- al ,n,lrti*l
trained; the strict control of Yiddish pu \on tlw5*!!
manifestation of indigenously Jewish cull
out of so mai
.ii ot indigenously Jewish cultura
lanj .lews as economic cruninak
Continued on Page '5*

+Jnisfi fhridlian
Paqe 5 fc

W*ff
*H
,ff
"" / ^^H
><<3^^B
^l M
*t fegj
K ^^k
LEnERS TO THE EDITOR
ACLU Defense Astonishing
\V'
Joseph J. Schwartz, worldwide executive head of the Israel
nd Oiqnnization, congra'ulates Rabbi Leon Kronish upon
i appointment as. chairman of the Greater Miami Israal
nd Oraanization to succeed Leonard Rosen. Installation of
Ibbi Kronish and other officials of the organization will take
(ice at the Israel Independence Day Dinner at the Fontaine-
3u Hotel on Sunday.
Israel Bond Drive to Open
I Independence Banquet
Continued from Page I-A
Samuel Friedland and Jack
intor: chairman irf the board.
S. Prpick; chairman of the
Ion- i: Is, Carl Weinkle;
man : I anks and Fiduciaries,
Laid Bi i bvairman of the
t |, Sidney D. Ansin;
I ch ol the Women's Di-
n. \h- Vnna Breniw Myers,
the helm of the
Iti Israel Bond Or-
Lai bi Kn nish brings
pbbi Joseph E. Rackovsky
Phone Jt 1-3595
MICHIGAN AVE., MIAMI BEACH
65 DODGE"*"
$"|95
1
ft Per Day
pins Miieaqe
BENS RENTALS
1 W. FIAGIER FR 30326 \
to h:s new post a record of achieve-
ment on behalf of many civic and
philanthropic causes and for Israel
Bands on a national level as na-
tionwide Israel Bond chairman tor
Synagogues and Temples.
Rabbi Kronish i* spiritual leader
. f Temple Befh Sholom. Among the
many areas of activities in which
l. has h ild a leading rt le are the
Central Conference of American
Ral bis, on wind-, he serves as a
n rrrber of the Executive Board.
He is a member of the Na-
tional Commission on Education
of the Central Conference of
American Rabbis Union of
American Hebrew Congregations.
He has served on the Executive
Committee of the Greater Miami
Jewish Federation and is presi-
dent of the Southeast Region of
the American Jewish Congress.
ll. i i .. ii li p mdence Day
Dinner will launch h< annual Is
rael Bond i impaign in Greater
Miami. Last year, under Le nard
l.i sen's :hairmansh:p, a reco .1 to
!;,! cl $2,650,000 in Israel Bonds
v i re sold in Miami.
EDITOR. The Jewish Floridian:
1 read with great astonishment
Howard Dixon's letter in your Apr
it. issue concerning the ACLU's pol-
icies toward criminal organizations
such as the American Nazis, the Ku
Klux Klan, e c. l was i pecially
chagrined to see the personal at-
tack he made against Maurice
Goldring and other Jewish people
having the same cpinion, which
ccrtainl) was unwarranted.
It's a typical attitude el peo;ilc
who do not have valid arguments
to indulge hi personal insults and
name-calling, and also their nature
In hide I).hind -real people's
names instead of talking about the
issue frankly, ui their own. In his
letter, Mr Dixon was a perfect ex-
ampl: i I these tat ic He spi aks
i tolerance, but can nol accept
aii- opir:ons which are nol in ac
ttrd w ilh his nu n
The people to whom Mr. Dixon
is referring, *uch as Judoe Felix
Frankfurter and Stephen Wise,
who endorsed the ACLU at that
time, certainly had no intentions
of giving Nazi criminals such pro-
tection; nor did our Founding
Fathers of this country have this
in mind when they drew up the
Constitution of the United States,
to create a society for the people
of this land. Such an allegation
is an insult against the memory
of these great people. Naturally,
everybody is entitled to protec-
tion under the law, but this
doesn't mean that our society
should be changed into a lawless
one.
We are trying to differentiate
between Nazis and Germans, be-
tween Nazis and Hungarians, etc..
and it is a pity thai Mr. Dixon is
even ready to differentiate between
Nazis and criminals, lie doesn't
ci mprehend the sufferings the
Jews and humanitj went through
during the Nazi era, and evidently
he doesn't know about the "Plan.
el Au-. hvi it/" and m :i n y -in tl
planet- which were placed into
the orbit of human space by the
Nazis
Our request to the American Civ-
il Liberties Uniort, if they -till re-
,spiel our human dignify, is t'>
train from imposing their prin
I pies on the Jewi-.i people, such .-
li.; theory hat it is to cur vi'il
interest to retain the Amerlt
Nazi Party as a political force.
Any Jew en quickly estimate
a here there best interests lie; ill
they have to do is to refresh thi
memories about the exterminat* n
camps In Europe, which arc al*o
pi ejected by the "so-called" Am
ican Nazi I'a:ty lor American As -
''
GSORGE G. WHITNE f
Miami Beeth
Arab Disunity Fired
By Bourguiba Drive
** c*.
V
Jewish Convalescent
Home
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310 COLLINS AVENUE Ph. 532-6491
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A Cheerful Home of Wormffc with Every Convonienc.
Including E/eyofor, Television, Etc.
SIDNEY SIECEL. Executive Director M.nlt.
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u^
ABSTRACTS ESCROWS
TITLE INSURANCE
A DIVISION OF
me'ucim
TITLE
MsuMncf Manure
Continued from Page 1-A
in the continuation oi the Jordan
River water diversion plans, while
il is left without Aral) backing."
While these fears were being
voiced openly in Beirut, however,
Lebanese tractors on Monday re-
sumed their water diversion work
near Israel's border. Earlier re-
ports from Lebanon claimed that
the tractors were being used for
| building only an irrigation pro-
ject. A report broadcast Monday
by Radio Damascus stated that
the Arab League Water Diver-
sion Board has decided that work
on the diversion projects "t-*
carried out in accordance wi"-
the schedule."
Aral) fears regarding the Bo .
guiba stand continued to be voic sd
in the Cairo press, where conee n
was indicated that Saudi Arab
Libya and .Morocco may be sidi g
ilently with the Tunisian pre*
dent. Al Goumhouria, the inflw
tial Cairo daily, asked pointed ..
in a lengthy feature article <
nouncing the proposals by Bo> -
guiba: "Djos silence on the part m
Morocco. Libya and Saudi Am
imply consent on (heir part?"
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Edison Center Branch: 5800 N.W./th Ave.
Kendall Branch: U.S. 1 at S.W. 104th St.
A_

Page 6-A
Jm*ist>fhrkMati
30 Bishops to Finalize Jewish Draft
Continued from Po 1 A
vember. by a vote of 1.992 to 99.
bad categorically exonerated the
Jewish people of the charge of de-
acide.
The secretariat spokesman said
Monday that a full, plenary meet-
ing of the M bishops of the body
would be held here May 9, to
work out the final version of the
Declaration's text on the basis of
amendments proposed during last
November's session and since.
These amendments, or "modi,"
will be reviewed by the 30 pre-
lates. They had already held dis-
cussions on the subject last Feb-
ruary, when they decided to post-
pone final action until the May 9
meeting.
After decisions are made at the
May meeting, the text will be sent
on to the Ecumenical Council, due
to reconvene at the Vatican Sep..
17. The Coordination Commission
lor the next Council session will
then schedule the revised draft for
Jewish War Yeterans Demand Inquiry
Of German Alien Who Fired Chemist
By Special Report
WASHINGTON Secretary cf
Defense Robert McNamara has
been asked by National Commander
Ralph Plofsky.
Veterans of the U.S.A.. for a report
on the firing of a Jewi-h Navy
chemist by an alien German super-
visor, who has been charged with
prejudice.
The chemist. Bernard Peristein,
of Washington. D C. was dis-
charged after 23 years of service
Peristein has filed anil in the I". S
Court Of Claim -
He has charged that his Ger-
man supervisor, a resident of the
United States for only three
years, was motivated by "bias,
malice, and prejudice." He said
the supervisor showed a "mark-
ed antagonism," presumably
arising from an attitude toward
Jews.
Commander Plofsky said that
'"the public has a right to know
all the fact- of thi> strange case
He said the JWV wa- iking
the Defense Deparlment to report
on whether the German. Dr Mar
tin Zimmer. participated in the Hit-
ler Youth movement.
Dr. Zimmer's age would have
ruled out more serious involvement.
it is thought. "But in a ca.se like
this, where an alien educated in
Nazi schools during the Hitler re-
gime fires an American citizen of
the Jewish faith who has served
so leng and apparently so ably
m the service of his government,
we have a right to raise questions."
said Commander Plofsky.
"Therefore.'" Commander PI ifskj
said, "We are awaiting a report
from Dr. Zimmer's >uperior> U
Defen>e Department authorities on
a general background.
"It is also our understanding
that Dr. Zimmer's father served
as an officer in the service of
Adolf Hitler, and one might ask
to what extent the son was in-
fluenced so that his decision to
fire a Jewish employee might be
totally free of prejudice.
"The JWV will carefully observe
'his cast said Commander Plof-
sky.
the agenda. The Bea Secretariat
spokesman made it very clear
that "no committee"obviously
referring to the ad hoc commission
can bypass this procedure or by-
pass the plenary' meeting of 30
bishops to be held May 9.
Cardinal Bea was meanwhile
scheduled to head the Vatican Sec-
retariat which deals with the Dec-
laration on Jews to be presented to
the forthcoming session of the Ecu-
meni:al Council for final adoption,
which arrived at Kennedy Airport
in New York on Wednesday. He was
en route to Philadelphia to accept
the International Fellous'iip Award
which was to be preserved to him
at a dinner on Thursday. He was to
be welcomed at the airport by a
.representative of the Philadelphia
Atchdiocese and an official of the
Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'nth.
Meanwhile. Prof Abraham J.
Hechel. who had visited the Vati-
can in connection with the pro-
posed statement on Jews by the
Fcwmenical Council. Monday is.
sued the following comment on re-
ports that the Vatican may revise
drastically the statement on dei
cide:
"The detcide charge is the most
I dreadful calumny over uttered. It
1 has resulted in rivars of blood
' end mountains of Human ashes.
To millions of Christians and to
the overwhelming majority of
Reman Catholic bishops, it is ab-
\ surd, monstrous, unhistoncal and
. the supreme repudiation of the
Gospel of love. Weakening the
document m any of its aspects
which was inspired by the gran-
deur of conscience and the spirit
of love, would remain for all
> time one of the major contribu-
> tiens to anti-Semitism. Wa prey
1 that Satan may never witness
such a triumph."
Final Concert 1964-65 Season
University Of Miami Symphony Orchestra
FABIEN SEVITZKY, Conductor
SUNDAY, MAY 2, p OP D f\A
MONDAY, MAY 3, ,UO rjW'
MIAMI BEACH AUDITORIUM
DADE COUNTY AUDITORIUM
RICHARD WAGNER S OPERA
LOHENGRIN
Sofoisfs Orchestra Chorus
TICKETS $2.25 to $5 50 SYM OFC WO 1-4960
BETH TORAH CONGREGATION
presents
The World Renowned Cantor
MOSES SERENSEN
FORMER CHIEF CANTOR OF RIGA, LATVIA
in a
MAARIY SERVICE AND CONCERT
of
Hebrew Liturgical, Israeli and Yiddish Songs
Monday Night, May 3rd, at 8 p.m.
Location: 163rd Street and 11th Avenue
North Miami Beach, Florida
Call Wl 7-7528 for Reserved Seats
WINNER OF 8 ACADEMY AWARDS
UST PKTUM MX HARRISON, BfST ACT0
GEORGE CUKOR, BEST DIRECTOR
''WszjssmwnBc
' AUDREY HEPBURN* REX HARRISON.
TKHNicoioee sufcwmuvisum'n nwa wuma saot .
LINCOLN THEATRE, LINCOLN ROAD miami beach je 21702
MICE SCAIE EVENING PERFORMANCES MATINEE PERFORMANCES
(incljd ng laxet) Monday thro Frl Sai.. Sun All Maiineei
Thursday i. Hoi.
ORCHESTRA $175 $3 50 $2 50
IOGE 300 3.75 J 50
PERFORMANCES AT 2 P M MATINEES 8 30 P M EVENINGS
BOX OFFICE OPEN 10 30 to :30
DR. JtHOMt BINS0N
Dr. Benson
Is Elected By
Fla. Pathologists
Dr. Jerome Benson Las been
elected president-elect of (be Flor-
ida Society of PatholoL.
The Florida Medical Association
this week announced Dr Benson's
election ;it sessions of the Associa-
tion hold last weekend in the Amer-
icana Hotel.
President of the Florida Society
of Pathologists is Dr. Sanford Mul-
len, of Jacksonville. Fla.
Dr. Benson is director of lab-
oratories and chief pathologist
at Mf. Sinai Hospital here.
Secretary of tho ML Sinai Med-
ical staff, he is associate professor
of pathology at the University of
Miami Mediid School, and has
been director of the Mt Sinai labor-
atories since 1957.
The Florida Society of Patholo-
gists is the official organization for
pathologists throughout the State
of Florida.
Mount Sinai
Vounteers Meet
Mount Sinai Hospital's newest
volunteer organization, the Sustain-
ing Board of Felloes comprised of
% men and women interested in
Mount Sinai's activities and ob-
jectives, will hold its first general
membership meeting Tuesday
evening, in the Louis E. Wolfson
Auditorium of the hospital.
The group, chaired by Milton
Weiss, will eleci members of Use
Executive Board and present a pro-
ject for approval to be undertaken
by the group.
In addition 10 the special reports.
Dr. Rudolph Drosd will present a
narration and slides on his recent
experiences with the H'pe ship
Project and its journey to Guinea.
Africa.
Philip Givens JwKk
Toronto. mean^
fyased him "gg.l
JwpreU 1 as a crutam1
f ^ can S3
Pathiesf.rthejevnsi
Pope told Mr. evens
To empha^e his ,
Paul n,irued or* i
to show Major Give*
was seiidini to jn
rabbi. In :t. the Pope e
"surpn- and ..
over the erakJsmS
during a Pavsirn '
,Srmon ln that sermoT.
.Tff interpreted the GJ
withthst day.quounijT
assertion that the Jew l
Jesus
"*!
The GO GO Musical
In Lfaeafoi Worn
...with GUEST STARS
OSCAR BRAND-JOAN RIVERS
dth Jim. Jake and Joan GOLDEBRIARS
and the FREE WHEELERS
5J
new
SONGS
rose
NODADt
OPivlJ"
27Tn_AVfc-
...with FUN STARS
KAREN TMORSELL-CURTIS
[TAYLOR-JERRY NEWBY-
'cowl
J?EDI}P ROMAS
-*-

I April 30. 1965
+Jen1sii Fhridfor
Paqe 7-A
merican Jews 'Uncertain' Today
IjM members of the Greater
Ebapter. American Jewish
l^f. heard a top-ranking
(' jewif'i community lead-
y Sunda> that freedom and
nay achiet'e what Hitler
feSemitisin could net the
L. 1 ol Jews ai Jews.
leim Shapiro, national di-
, Jewish Communal Affairs
Enerican Jewish Commitiee,
,,1,,: ii gathering at the
Jpiaza Hotel that "this is
I ol .iikI tragic ironies
L110 said that American
4ue the uneasy feeling that
Leer able to rely upon De-
fined as Jews by the host-
j others, confronted by the
Ir. of a voluntary self-de-
li which will give their chil-
ft+ sense that to choose to
Ljsh is a choice worthy of
len, they find themselves
1 rv and at a loss."
: declared that "many
bp Jews Mill bear psycholog-
|tbt- 'mark of the oppres-
:emembers of other reviled
\y groups, they have turned
! and come to accept deep
subconscious the invidious
> 1 hi'm selves used by the
led to jusify their preju-
hey were still largely an
*t group, driven by the im-
Itivard economic achieve-
ii'd full participation in
>i. society, Jews came to
: It was necessary to be like
(Anglo-Saxon Protestants,"
t decades since the turn
entury, American Jews
seeded in making Judaism
hgly like American Protest-
[ This can he seen in their
p^ modification of the rab-
f-h into one parallel to that
ptestant minister; their se-
|cat of the Jewish calendar
three annual festive and
holidays, their conversion
Jism from a moment-to-mo-
uide lor behavior to a pro-
I rt 1
At annual meeting of Greater Miami Chapter of the Ameri-
can Jewish Committee are (left to right) Seymour Samet, for-
mer executive director, who was honored at the function; Mrs.
Charles Finkels'ein, president of the Chapter; Judge Harold
Spaet, former president; and Mannheim Shapiro of the na-
tional American Jewish Committee staff in New York City.
I cess of occasional temple-going and Finkelstein. president, was elected
a tendency to associate primarily fcr a seCond year and gave Presi-
with other Jews." |den,s Awar(,s of Apprcdation for
Shapiro told the American Jewi.-h outstanding service to Sirs. M. A.
; Committee meeting that "if Jews Sumberg, for her contribution as
want Judaism to survive, if they chairman of literature communica-
Progressive Bank
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. our HKCetl his been phe-
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at* lhe> like the friendly,
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IEFFERSON
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[MIAMI BEACH #'
30i-an,t srnitT
1 Uei.i, .,, plMlM Ihmi
* 'lotmAi .,., ,ntim
*9>.r -"- eoawoM1
want it to attract and hold their
children, it will be necessary' to
take a number of measures. In-
dividual Jews will have to dredge
(Hit of their subconscious and dis-'
pose ol the spectra] sense by wtikh
they are haunted that to be dis-,
tinctivelj Jewish is to be f lesser
worth.
"They will have to undertake a
massive effort to acquire knowl-
edge of the law, the lore and the
cilture that Jews and Judaism
have produced through the cerv ,
turies. They will have to narrow
the gap between the Jewish prin-
ciples they profess and their ac-
tual attitudes and activity."
He added: "They will have to
bring the Judaic ethos out of the
past into the present by applying '
it to the great social issues of our
day. including peace, poetry and
equality for all men. They will have
to overcome the immigrant habit
of thinking there is a distinction
between being Jewish and being
American ami accept, as other
Americans do, the idea that we are
both Jewi.-h and American."
Circuit Court Judge Harold Spaet.
firmer president of the Greater
Miami Chapter, served as chairman
c< the function. -Vrs. Charles H.
Technion Gets
Scholarships Here
Lee Rutstein, Southern regional
director, American Technion Soc-
iety, narrated a film. "The City
Called Technion, to a group of
' over 650 men and women last week.
Inspired by the film presentation,
a winter vacationer set up a per-
petual scholarship, a contribution
of $5,000.
On Wednesday night, Rutstein
spoke at Temple Emanu-El in Ft.
Lauderdale and showed the Tech-
nion film. Another perpetual scho-
larship was donated by friends of
Technion who live in Hollywood. I
Judge Frederick N. Barad is
president of the Soutih Florida
Chapter of the American Technion
Soeiet>
tons; Mrs. Philip Weinstein, vice
chairman of the Bioward Section,
for her leadership there; and David
B. Fleeman, honorary president
and chairman of membership, for
his efforts which resulted in add-
ing 220 new units this year.
Two members who received
these awards in 1964 were given
gold stars in recognition of their
continued outstanding service: Mrs.
Leonard Silverman, civil rights to-
ordina'.or; and James R. Katzman.
lecal chairman of the National
Executive Board meeting held here
in December, 1964.
Seymour Samet, former execu-
tive director of the Chapter, cur-
rently on the staff of the Com-
munity Relations Service in
Washington, D.C., was honored
by the establishment of a Human
Relations Library in the Profes-
sional Library of the Dade County
Board of Public Instruction.
Mrs. Finkelstein. in announcing
"us as a project Of American Jew-
ish Committee, presented Samet
with a plaque "lor his dedicated
leadership in human relations and
o man's understanding <>f his Eel
!tw man."
Mrs. Bernard Stevens presented
her "Duponl Plaza 9: Encore with
Footnotes 1965."
The invocation was given by Ba-
irn de Hirsch Meyer, first presi-
dent of the Greater Miami Chapter
which was founder! fn 1952.
Members of the annual meeting
committee were Judge Spaet.
.hairman, Mrs. Aaron Fair, Mrs.
Morton Halpern, Mrs. Bernard Ste-
vens, Barton S. Udell.
Mrs. Eleanor Lipton is acting di-
rector of the Greater Miami Chap-
ter.
Mrs. Eleanor Lipton, acting di-
rector of the chapter, gave a re-
port on chapter affairs since her
assuming of the post. Theme of
her presentation was "The
Change." The report stressed
the changing climate of Amer-
ican Jewish Committee opinion.
Among these, Mrs. Lipton cited
the national organization's sid-
ing with Orthodox Jewish qroups
across the nation in support of
President Johnson's aid to edu-
cation act.
.Mrs. Lipton also reported on her
recent participation in a series of
meetings in St. Louis. Mo. The
series was a workshop on human
relations institutes to be opened
at some 35 universities around the
country, Participants included del-
egates from the universities, in-
cluding the University of Miami,
where an institute will be held this
summer.
Mrs. Lipton previously helped
Convalescent Home
Joins Association
An era of "guaranteed quality
ol care and service" to residents of
homes for the aging was predicted
'this week by Sidney Siegel. execu-
tive director of the Jewish Con-
valescent Home of South Florida.
Announcing its membership in
the American Association of Homes
for thr> Aging, Siegel said the Jew-
ish Convalescent Home of South
Florida is "harnessing its plans
for future development and growth
to a pacemaking organization
which provides the mechanism for
an individual home to relate na-
tional experience and progress to
the many changing aspects of aging
which concern our community."
""The American Association of
Homes for the Aging is the na-
tional membership organization
, of non-profit, voluntary and gov-
ernmental institutions for senior
citizens. Founded in 1961 with
the assistance of a Ford Founda-
tion grant, and sponsored by the
National Council of Aging, AAHA
now serves its more than 550
member homes.
Noting that over 20.000 aging
persons in the United States now
! reside in an estimated 4,000 in-
-tihitions like the Jewish Convales.
cent Home of South Florida, Siegel
isaid that beards and managers of
non-profit homes arc faced with
. rapid-changing serial and economic
! patterns "which call for bold re-
evaluations combined with well-ad-
, vised judgments in the formulation
ol present and future policies of
i service and management."
Israeli Group
Installation Set
I rraell Group of Hadassah
CATS will be installed by Mrs.
offi-
Nat
Bart.h. president of Miami Beach
Chapter, on Monday.
Following the luncheon at the
Algiers Hotel. Mrs. R. M. Schwartz.
Will present a musical program,
set up the proposal for the Univer-1 with Olga Bibor Stern at the piano,
sity of Miami participation in the j Mrs. Samuel Appel is president
nationwide program. I of the Israeli Group.
knk You ...
' THE CITIZENS OF NORTH
" BEACH, MY MANY FRIENDS,
"" "*KERS AND VOTERS, FOR
SELECTING ME YOUR
CITY COUNCILMAN.
Sincerely,
James E.
Reardon
Are you spending an extra
dollar on these three words ?
Not if you're buying Canadian Lord divert. You won't find the
words"Bottled in Canada" on any of our bottles.
We're bringing our great Ginadian whisky across the
border in barrels and bottling it in the U.S.A.
This way, we save enough in taxes and freight to shave
about a dollar off the price of every fifth.
(Good Canadian whisky will never be cheap. But at
least we've found a way to make it reasonable.)
Try it.
Just look for the important new Canadian.,
In the handsome square bottle.
Without those extra words.
Canadian Lord Calvert
CAN VDI IN wmUCY-1 BLEND.M PROOF. IMPORTED BV CALVERT DISTILLERS CO, N.Y.C.

A-"-
1965
*Jenis* florid/an
Paqe 9-A
wrguiba Pushes Peace Campaign
CMKCID WITH fOMtNTING DISUNITY PAG LA
i[\, President
I. Jba <>f Tunisia
11 t;. k hh one-man
fc., i, -1 ide !'" Arab
their dream of
I, ,.. seek instead a
Red r -
.. i, he proposed
i,j0l i id by the Arab
. T i i r n i.'- lia'e
a||( 111 ime neutral capi-
conditiora ho
- Eor Arab agree-
Le, -al even he ad-
I,,. oably would re-
; pr : sal.
Ls public call for negstia-
[lit proposed that Israel ac-
.. United Nations partition
Irmtr.daliors of 1947. One of
would require Israel to
hip territory it seized in re-
Arab invaders in the 1948
nd return to the original
Ijaries proposed in the UN
L-nendaiions for separate
[.nd Jewish states in man-
dated Palestine. The other would
commit Israel to permit the Arab
refugees either a return to their
pre-1948 homes and properties or
Israeli compensation.
In a related develcpment, he
;:!d a Christian Science M inltor
correspondent that he could nol ac-
cept a propos il male by Mrs. Golda
Meir, Israel's Foreign Mir
the-' e come to Israel to act as a
mediator for the negotiations he
'.'.ms proposing. Mrs Min- made
ler proposal in an interview with
."i Israeli journalist uhich wan
M adcast trom Tel Aviv on Apr. ig.
He explained his rejection by
ic irin-^ that "Only Palestine
Arabs" were qualified to negotiate
on thi r fate" and he was not
ne i f them, lie posed the qu< --
ion: "Would Mrs. Meir accept
h"s compromise solution of return-
ing to legality within the frame-
work of United Nations decisions?
Ii I were an Israeli." he told the
correspondent, "I would so so. It
would be a compromise which
vould make possible bath coopera-
tion and coexistence."
He asserted that if Israel
"would agree to negotiate on this
basis, the Palestine Arabs them-
selves and other representatives
cf the Arab people can negotiate
with then-." He repeated state-
ments he had made previously
durirg visits to Jordanian Jeru-
salem and Beirut that the Arabs
cculd not presently win a war
against Israel.
lie I >rmcd the current dispute
over Arab announced intentions to
divert the headquarters of the
dan River and thus deny its
waters to Israel as a "secondary"
matter which would disappear "like
e h. Arab-Israeli disputes" it a
basic compromise solution was
81 hieved. The Jordan waters could
become an clement of cooperation.''
He suggested thai perhaps a sort
i.i Gallup poll might determine
whether the Arabs were really as
rpposed as '.hey sounded to his
Call for moderation.
For his "distinguished volunteer services" in behalf of Variety
Children's Hospital. Zev Bufman. of Coconut Grove Playhouse
(center), receives the hospital's Appreciation Award. The
plaque presentation is made by Harold Dunsky (riqht), direct-
or of the hospital development program, shown with Mrs
Dunsky, as they attended a recent performance of Gersh-
wins "Porgy and Bess."
wish Floridian Readers
j7
- 682 or Broward
NORTH CAROLINA
Ci~) Osceola
a: > through 13
fed Strict 8U
Uon and operated b)
I ruin B. Marshall, principal.
For information call III 5-3585.
Comp Judaea
Bovs and CiirisLocated in
Strict kashruth
CAMP PINEWOOD
ip Pine-wood is located in
sonville. N.C., and is under
u/e.'ii- nt Dr. and Mrs.
Mi,:. ;. .n and Mr. and
Eh Mclttt
Bblf children ages 5 to
Jere are two sessions: for
flweeks, June 26 to Aug. 20;
ur v coks, July 23 to Aug. 20.
ured ai jolt, tennis, football
Bseball. eaure lore, camp
tri; hikes, music ac-
tion, an I dramatics.
on the program are photcg-
all u ter s|x>rt>. archery
bath services and choir are
[ ind tutoring is of-
Is, such as re-
ret i, i. u math and He-
I been under the
I i : directorship of
For
Henderson ville,
ibserved.
For local information. DirectOI
Frank Fa.benbloom. 945-9665 Mi-
ami; or Don I'richason, L'N 6-067:!
or 799-4389: or write 50 Whitehall
St.. Atlanta, Ga.
f. *
Camp Highlander
HighlandsBoys and girls 7 to 14,
write Larry J. Pedicord. 1501 NE
62nd St.. Ft, LauderdaJc Fla.
Blue Star Camp
Girls and Boys 7 to 17Located
in Hendersonville. Write to Her-
man 51. and Harrj G. Popkln, lioo
i rescent Ave. N.E.. Atlanta. C.a
In Greater 'Miami area contact
Mrs. I.i! Rosen. IK 1-8205: Mrs.
Roz Sutta. HI 6-1846 or HI 6-0817;
or. and Airs. Irving Bernstein.
I UN 6-3244: Ham Kaplan. \V.\ 2
1162 or WA 3-1577.
Camp Pinewood
Located in Hendersonville. Fur
nd Mel:/ers for
rs
;., kitchen are un-
le siun Of a trained
an, meals are well-
1 \ lied to allow for
All baking is
n uses.
- situated on rolling
1.4U0 feet above sea
int of the :ampus
>'A private Lake Luana.
which are arranged the
m i o bui! lings which ccm-
thc camp Information is
We t 535 W 30th St.. Miami
hoys and girls, ages 5-17. Directors.
Dr. and Mrs. Donald D. Michaelson.
MO 7-1808, MO 7-9781 and Mr. and
Mis. Eli Meltzer, JE 8-8696. direct-
ors for past eleven years.
For brochure, Camp Pinewood.
53S W. 30th St.. Miami Beach.
PENNSYLVANIA
Pine forest Camp
In the Pocono Mountains 4'i;
hours from Miami Airport to camp
by plane and car. Separate facil-
ities for Boys and Girls 6 to 16.
For information and brochures
contact Fithian Studio of Dancing
and Drama. JE 1-7883. or Theda
Shapiro. 238-0864.
EMANU-EL SUMMER CAMP
Temple Emanu-EI is accepting
reg tration for its Summer Day
Camp, which will open on June
14 ter its eiglf'i consecutive year.
Milt o n Feinstein, director, an-
rounced. The camp is under the
personal guidance of Dr. Irving
Lehi man.
The synagogue centered camp
places special emphasis on pro-
Igiamming in Jewish cultural and
spiritual value.-, with a well-round-
ied athletic program, field trips,
dramatics, singing and dancing
A well-trained staff under the di-
rection of "Uncle Miltie," history
teacher at Miami Beach High
.-.lit 1. is in charge of all activities
Campers are provided with a bev-
erage at lunch time, as well as a
mid-morning and aiternon snack,
and bus transportation to and
from camp. A hot lunch is optional.
Fur'.her information may be ob-
tained from the Temple office at
1701 Washington Ave.
CAMP JUDAEA
CAMPING WITH A ClffESfVCf
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C.
OUR 12th SEASON
BOYS & GIRLS 3rd 10th GRADES
IN THI PICTUKtSQUt BlUt R/DGf MOUNTAINS
$465-8 WEEKS $245-4 WEEKS
ALL THE USUAL CAMPING ACTIVITIES Complete Swimming Instruc-
tion & Canoeing Dramatics Nature Study Camp-Outs Etc.
A UNIQUE PROGRAM BRINGING THE SPIRIT OF ISRAEL TO OUt
CAMPERS Israeli Folk Dancing and Singing Discussion Groups
Special Projects.
SPECIAL AS IN PAST SUMMERS, Israeli Boy and Girl Scouts Will
Participate for Entire Season.
STRICT KASHRUTH OBSERVED.
ONLY SECOND SESSION LEFT
Call FRANK FARBENBLOOM, Director, 945-9665. Miami
or DON PRICHASON, UN 6-0673 or 759-4369
or Write 50 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
MEMBER OF AMERICAN CAMPING ASSOCIATION
Sponsored By Hadassah and Zionist Oraaniiation of America
An Outstanding Mountain Camp in the Pocono Mts. of Pennsylvania
PINE FOREST CAMP
34

lay. April 30. 1965
*Jmlsti fhrtdtnn
Page 11-A
'cumenical Statement in Revision
Continued from Pg 1-A
be New York Times, in a cable
its correspondent in Rome
junday. said that the draft dec
jtion is now being fought at top
Is in Ihe Vatican, and is in
Cer of being so diluted as to
e its message meaningless.
correspondent cited the fol-
Mg fads as indications that
[declaration faces new chal-
ks, and that changes in its
may be made next month,
j,g a plenary meeting of the
Council Secretariat for Christian
| Unity:
1. Th. document had been
| passed on to an ad hoc extra-
i councilor commission of four
| prelates, acting as a separate
.group instead of being part of
the Council, for review of the
declaration and for recommend-
ing revisions. That body is com-
posed of four prelates, headed
by the Rev. Luigi Carli, of Segni,
Italy, identified as "one of Hie
most ultra-conservative voices in
the church."
(p. Pepper Will be Guest Speaker May 6
Israel Independence Rally on Beach
i Stales Congressman Claude
ber will he principal speaker
IGreali-r Miami's community-
celebration of the 17th anni-
ary cf Israel's independence
fsday night, May 6. 8 p.m., at
[Miami Beach Auditorium,
onsored by Ihe Zionist Council
juth Florida, the giant rally is
I and open to the general public.
brdu'.L! 1 o Manuel Burstein,
fcdent of Ihe Zionist Council.
fit is altogether fitting that
p. Pepper, who played such a
kjor role in fighting for Israel's
^ogniticn by the United States
United Nations during his
ice in the Senate, has accept-
our invitation," Burstein
pp Pepper, twice elected to
en-- ;iom Florida's Third Con-
LAND
ACQUISITION
L LOANS
and LAND
IEVEL0PMENT
LOANS
specialties at
[WASHINGTON FEDERAL
There is still plenty of
land to buy and build
on...
WASHINGTON FEDERAL
Pioneered in this type
o' financing...for infor-
mation call JE 8-8452
Washington
f) Federal
IWttSm LOAN ASSOCIATION Of MIAMI BfACH
j'01 Mnidiin Ave. 1133 Notmjndy Dr.
! w" t. 1671h St. Phono: 945-7675
*">"> County Dial Direct: 52M351
l'''* "-0.IH0OK
*s*iiir,
' BAtHMts or Tilt oahi>
gressionel District, served in the
Senate from November 4. 1936 to
January 3. 1951. and returned to
Congress exactly 12 years later.
The legislator, who will bo 65 in
September, was a stalwart in the
Democratic leadership during the
se.ond, third and fourth terms of
the late President Rcowvelt. and
has been a champion of liberal leg-
islation Ihroughcut his career.
Admission to the Thursday night
rally, although free, is by ticket
only. Tickets may be secured from
ffiecrs of local units of rladassah,
the Zionist Organization of Amer-
ica. Karband. Mizrachi, Pioneer
Women. Poale Zion and other co-
operating agencies
A star-studded entertainment
program is being arranged, ac-
cording to Burnett Roth and
Gerald Schwartz, honorary
presidents of the Zionist Council
and co chairmen of the 17th an-
niversary celebration.
The Miami Beech Auditorium
event, Burstein pointed out, will
be held on the exact Hebrew cal-
endar anniversary of Israel's in-
dependence in 1948, the fifth of
[yar, and will coincide with offi-
al ceremonies in the state of Is
rael.
"It will be an evening of re-
joicing over Israel's progress and
of remembrance of the hM
events which shaped the rebirth
of the Jewish State," Burstein as-
serted
Hep. Pepper is a member of the
House Banking and Currency Com-
mittee, the .Subcommittees o'
Domestic Finance. International
Finance. International Trade and
chairman of the Sub-committee on
Tourism.
He played a major role in se-
curing federal funds for Dade
County's Interama project. A na-
tive of Alabama and a graduate
of the University of Alabama, he
is a graduate of Harvard Law
School.
As a member of the Senate For-
eign Relations Committee for
some 11 years, he served as chair-
I man of the powerful Senate Middle
' East Sub-committee and was a
foremost spokesman for the cause
iof Israel's establishment.
Burstein stressed that there will
'be no fund-raising, solicitations or
appeals of any form at the Thurs-
day night celebration.
Tony Daryll. featured singing
star at the Carillon Hotel, who
chew rave notices for his perform-
ance in "West Side Story." and
SaKva Merrige. mezzo soprano,
will headline the entertainment
program. Esther Barrett will ac-
company at the piano
Mrs. Arthur Pekelner, honor-
ary president; Mrs. Milton
Green, vice president; and Mrs.
Manuel Burstein, financial se-
cretary; are serving with Roth
. and Schwartz as associate chair-
| men of the community-wide
meeting.
Members of the Young Ji-deans'
dance team will be a special fea-
tured attraction. Don Pritchard-
son, director of t.he Zionist Youth
Commission, will present the anni-
versary selection.
This group has reportedly pro-
posed a completely new and short-
er text of a declaration which
would speak merely of "forgive
ness" to the Jews rather than of
exonerating them of the deicide
charge. Only one member of the
ad hoc group. Giovanni Cardinal
Colombo. Archbishop of Milan,
was reported to have opposed the
changes advocated by Bishop
Carli.
2. "Highest Vatican authorities"
were reportedly in favor of revis-
ing the preliminary declaration "to
insure its orthodoxy and purity of
doctrine" and to safeguard the in-
terests of Roman Catholics in Ar-
ab lands who fear their govern-
ments would discriminate against
them if the declaration is adopt-
ed as approved last November.
3. A magazine article by Bish
op Carli last month, bluntly as-
serting that the Jews of Jesus'
day did, indeed, bear collective re-
sponsibility for His crucifixion.
Further, the Bishop wrote that, to
the extent that Judaism today
constitutes the "free and voluntary
continuation" of that of Jesus'
time, today's Jews continue to
"participate objectively in the re-
sponsibility for deicide."
4. A sermon on Apr. 4 by
Pope Paul VI illustrating the
continued rejection of Jesus by
many men by reference to the
Jews who "in the end, killed
him." Assurances by Vatican
spokesmen that this was mere-
ly a pastoral reference to scrip-
tural texts without any signifi-
cance for the declaration have
failed to still speculation that it
indicated papal adoption of the
conservative thesis.
5. Intense diplomatic activity be-
! tween Arab representatives and
the Vatican, the Arabs insisting
that the preliminary declaration
as it stands would be interpreted
as Vatican support of Israel.
The four-man commission had
been requested by Pope Paul to
submit a unanimously agreed-upon
document to the next session of
the Ecumenical Council. Since no
unanimity was achieved, the com-
mission has reportedly passed on
its report to the Secretariat for
Christian Unity, headed by Augus-
tin Cardinal Bea. The latter has
been the chief proponent ot a
strong declaration, clearly exon-
erating the Jews of the deicide
charge.
The Times reported that high-
ranking churchmen, including
Americans, who have asked the
Vatican to reassure them that the
November draft would not be al-
tered substantively, have received
"equivocal answers from the high-,
est Vatican sources."
people are saying
CAMELOT HALL
is all leased out.
that's not true,
there are exac
29 apartments
left out of 302.
(SORRY WE COULDN'T TELL YOU
SOONER-THE FIRST 273 WERE LEASED
BEFORE WE COULD GET AROUND TO
DOING ANY ADVERTISING!)
Word-of-mouth did it. People came, saw, leased and talked.
How they did talk-all about unsurpassed ocean front location,
luxury features without end, resort facilities, amazingly low
rentals. In fact, they're still talking. That's why we take
the liberty of suggesting that you come see for yourself as
quickly as possible; you may be sure there won't be 2S
apartments left (six one-bedroom and 23 two-bedroom, as of this
writing) when you do get here. People keep leasing them.
Two-Bedroom Apartments from s270
One-Bedroom Apartments from $200
including wall-to-wall carpeting, reserved covered parking, private
oceanfront terraces, 30-foot living rooms and some two
dozen other very desirable features, all at an unequalled address.
1
I
1
T
RENTAL APARTMENTS
ON THE OCEAN AT 10185 COLLINS AVENUE BAL HARBOUR, FLA.
UN 5-0535 By Southland General Builders

support 'if
civil rights pr dom of
;. ment, education,
;
i commodations
During 1964, Bishop Carroll
Brandeis Names
Former Floridian
By Special rteport
WALTHAM, Mass Leonard
Singer, of Florida Atlantic Uni-
versity, has been appointed di-
rector of Learning Resources at
Brandeis University, effective in
Scptem her
-. a resident "I Boca Raton.
Fla., i* curren;!> director of liarn-
' irce .i' Florida Atlantic
University there Prior to 1962. he
\ as employed with the Dade Coun-
ts Board oi Instruction chairman
rf the Spech l>< | artmenl and de
f the D > Junior
el liter.
lie is tin .: "The Florida
Stdry-Highe| Educajion/i ami has
v ". exfl -
i .. "i Audi eti in"
the "National Physical Educa-
BS and MS de
i..... Boston i .- i rsitj. and was
>sical mus lirector for sev-
B -' >i :.. lio statioi
i i iO's,
served, and still serves as chair-
man of the IB-member Dade Coun-
ty Mf-tio Community Relation
Board, which he first prop:sed
and helped organize. The late
President Kennedy publicly
singled out Dade County for the
work of its Metro Community
Relations Board.
Bishop Cam 11 also i> one of three
Dade County Citizens who were ap-
pointed by President Johnson as
number; oi the newly-created
Citizens Con nittee tor Community
Relations,
The Silver \u oaliian Award of
the National Conference of Christ-
ians and Jews was presented to
Bishop Carroll 'Miring the annual
Brotherhood Dinner here in Febru-
ary.
The award iu- presented in ab-
sentia. Bishop Carroll was on of-
ficial business in Brazil this week.
Mrs Finkelstein is a lending club-
woman and civic worker ltere .vie
v. as last Sunday installed for a sec-
ond term as president of the Great-
ci Miami Chapter of the American
Jewish Committe.
In July. 1963. she received the
Outstanding Alumna Award of
Alpha Bpsilon I'.u Sor rity for
Commumtj Service She was found-
es lint df the sororitj 's
ter at the University oi .Miami.
I v nnivt
in Fcbni.il>
Active in many community af-
faiis, Mrs. Finkelstein served
five terms as president of th? Girl
Scout Council of Tropical Florida.
She is chairman of the Dade
County Quality Education Com-
mittee, which produced the first
report in more than a decade on
hew to improve the county school
system.
Mrs. Finkelstein is on the board
i : Traveler's tod & let) \
' -- i iation ol I"niversitj Women
and I mal v'isi
loi -
Permanent judges for the annual
li< ebe, man-
aging i Miami H< raid; Rail h
ck. vice i in charge of
i i .'-. U'l \ .1 an I 1 ';! i K Shochet,
pi I lislu i oi Thi sh Floi ii ian.
to cur community, and to men,
women, and children overseas
who cou.it on us for a life of
freedom and dignity," Fleeman
said.
"It is most fitting that our dinner
meeting tike place at the n?v.est
Federation affiliated facility in air
community, the Y.M and YWHA
he added.
Assisting Fleeman in key posi
tii ns on the Dinner Committee will
be a nun utstanding leade a
'ii and in comm.mal
vity l)r Joseph P .\arot will
e i toast master lor the even
lack Katzman and Mrs.
i man are c -chairing
i \.:angi mei i- Committee Mrs.
ton B G< tdsU in wiH be | i
airman, and Mrs Sol Gold-
in will serve as ch lirman of
nstess -
he Dinner temmit-
I--I include Leoj Mrs
Jack Ablin, Mrs. William I Bren-
11 r, Joseph Cohen, Leo Eisj ..-
..: saron Farr, Paul Faske M -
Char!"- Ft i m rg. Marshall Harris,
Mrs Daniel Neal Heller.
Also. Mrs. L; n Kaplan. Mrs
Inez Krensky, Mrs. Sam Luby, Jr.
Mrs. Anna Brenner Myers, Sam
Pollock, Fred K Shochet. Mrs S '
Silverman. Harold Tfaurman, Mrs.
Howard Trinz and Mrs. Carl
Weinkle.
,M*
Presentation of a beautifully-illus::.
is made to Jacob Rabinowitz. of Be. Iskradi
Irvinq Lehrman. chairman of the 19c: Combined Jews'
peal. Rabinowitz has been a leader in the Greater MinU
ish Federation and in the Jewelry Group of Cerr.c.-.e:'"
Appeal for the last 25 years, and also in Temple fc:
where Rabbi Lehrman serves ai spuiiual .eccer.
Yeshiva to Get Kennedy Fund?
NEW YORK iJTAi An
agreement for cccpcntion in the
expansion of rcsear.h and educa-
tion for mentally retarded children
was signed here this week by Dr.
Samuel Belkm. president ol Y< hi
va University, and Francis Cardi-
nal Spellman. Archbishop oi N w
York, in hi- caoacit) a- head of the
governing board of the Kennedy the -' -
Child Study Center conducted in lie I ij
fiis city by the Catholic Charities
Participating in the ceremony Um .rwnwt,
were Sargent Shriver. direct r of "> EinsteinM
the U.S. Office of Economic Op-
portunity, who is also director of tic*
the Joseph P Kenned) Jr Founds ir.elpetl
tion. and S !ti r Patricia, i Imi is- i
rratrr of a day care center nAere I
*%(

April 30. 1965
+Jen1sti rhrMirir
Page 13-A
orld Leaders Recall Warsaw Ghetto
nued from Page .1-A
ment to the Unknown Jew-
I Rev Msgr. Riquet. dean
e'Dame. preached the ser-
foe centuries-old cathedral.
had himself been im-
in a Nazi concentration
mat ,ne war- In ^ pres'
y^ President, he preached
recalling these "days of
,!! terror." and led a pray-
ed! those, whatever their
, med, who vanished into
! nighl "
hbile, M Pompidou, accom-
Pierre Messmer, Min-
Defense, and Jt-an Sain-
I jgti 11 war Veterans,
jn ie ceremony at the
m to the Unknown Jewish
[Walking down a lny lane
tell war veterans, whose
I their flags, and
iounded a dirge, the
i Hanked by a Pres
Guard ol Honor in full uni-
|i rds drawn, laid a
idiil of the nioiiu-
urcith was inscribed
i ie Prime Minis-
pssrds of persons stood at
o- during the rites. Many
perl concentration camp
s Chief official Jewish
po-its were Grand Rabbi
iKapian and Baron Guy de
lh Id, president of Fonds
jju'f Unifie. The tradition-
for the dead was recit-
|c cantor. Similar services
dd in cities and towns
hojt France. Special pro-
recalling the Naii terror
presented on the French
II radio and television net-
pers ins meanwhile
jhaftesbury Theatre
Remembrance Day
honoring the martyrs of
r.\ i;'i> i i uprising ff 22
fci> and celebrating also the
i ary of the liberation
lot the most notorious Nazi
pmps like those at Belsen
hau. Prominent non-Jews
8< iii am mg them Sir
J n< Britain's Attorney
weaker at the ttinction in-
Commander K Ashe Lin-
ae Polish-Jewish Kx-Serv-
Assi :iation, which was
he principal sponsors of the
event, along with leading represen-
jtatives of the other co-sponsoring
J groups, including the Board of
i Deputies of British Jews and the
British section of the World Jewish
i Congress.
A message from Dr. Nahum Gold-
mann, president of the World Jew-
ish Congress, stated that "Jews of
the present generation must, again
and again, recall the tragedy of the
Nazi era, the significance of which
; has not yet been realized. Meetings
like this one must serve as warn-
! ings to all peoples of the world that
they must protect freedom."
A large rally marking the 22nd
anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto
uprising was held in New York un-
der the auspices of the Warsaw
Ghetto Resistance Organization.
Those participating also paid
homage to the memory of the 6,
000.000 Jews killed in the Nazi hol-
ocaust. A resolution was adopted
urging the construction of a suit
able memorial in New York City to
honor the Jewish victims of the
Nazis.
The main speaker at the event
was Judge Michael A. Musmanno,
one of the jurists who participated
in the Nuremberg War Crimes
Trial. Rabbi Israel Moushowitz, for-
mer president of the New York
Board of Rabbis, also addressed the
gathering.

''"'" dalti-dayi of the
-WitaUnl English daUt
I** l 196T-Jewish holi-
1 Calendar absolutely free
!'krMders- M
fbneation when writing.
J*t-card or letter to:
Heinz Co.. Dept. J2, Box
Pittsburgh. Pa. 15230. _
DO YOU LOVE YOUR
GRANDCHILDREN?
Children Live in the Future.
Their gateway to that future is college
or other important financial needs and
every year the cost of these needs goes up
IF YOU HAVE MONEY AVAILABLE FOR INVESTMENT
- MONEY WHICH YOU CAN PUT INTO SOUND SPECULATION WITHOUT ENDANGERING YOUR OWN SECURITY -
NOW IS THE TIME TO INVEST IT FOR THE FUTURE NEEDS OF YOUR GRANDCHILDREN
festival Dinner
2, Nation; 1 Chil-
Hospital, held a
dinner, featuring
< mes, mi Sunday
ii tion was held in
teria, 1475 N\V 12th
r^ER HEBREW-ENGLISH
fNDAR LIKE THIS ONE!
M "O OUR READERS!
COME SEE FOR YOURSELF
From Palmetto Expressway, turn north at the N.W. 67th
Ave., Extension to Country Club of Miami; drive through
Country Club of Miami Estates and through Argo Farms
(2,500 feet) to Country Club Acres.
COUNTRY CLUB ACRES Would be a wise land invest
ment. It is row land, divided by survey into 1, 2, S and 10 acre tracts. It
will not be in demand lor development next month or next year but by 1970
it could be as valuable as any residential land in Dade or Broward counties. It
is in Broward County, just north of the Dade County line, 5,000 teet from an
area where lots (not acres; are selling for 10,000 and up, as recently recorded.
It is directly in the path of westward and northward growth; close enough to
Greater Miami to be strongly affected by it, yet subject to Broward's lower
taxes. Arterial trafficways have already been mapped and documented they
will eventually bound the property on all sides. Adjacent property on the south
is listed with brokers for sale at $6,000 an acre.
This is not "get-rich-quick" land; it is a long-range opportunity for the serious
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You Can Drive Right to COUNTRY CLUB ACRES
INVESTMENT CORP. OF FLORIDA, Developers of Plantation Acres
Fort Lauderdale: 3101 N. Federal Hwy. Phone 947-3536

Page 14-A
* Unisl tkrkMiain
Fridc
Panorama:
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
Sign of Spring: When the Rabbi Visits the ParJ
UfHEN t h e
^ rabbi vis-
its the park, it
is a sign of
spring. I L.
R a b i n ovitz. i
who writes
about Torah
and Flora" in
the Jerusalem
Past, tells of
saintly Rabbi Kook and the stu
dents of his Yeabiva to the Jeru.
salem Gardens to recite the
blessing on seeing the trees in
blossom The blessing which is
found in the Tractate Berachot
of the Talmud reads: "Bleeeed
art Thou. O Lord, who hath not
left His world lacking and hath
created in it goodly trees for She
pleasure of mankind "
I do not know how many rab-
bis perform this Mitzvah A new
book on the work of the rabbi
has just come out. The author is
Dr. Abraham J Feldman. for-
mer president Of 'he Central
Conference of American Rabbis.
Dr. Feldman notes that the rab-
binate has undergone many
changes. He .has a sense of hti
mor and tells of the little boj
who explained the difference be-
tvveen the cantor and the rabbi
"The cantor sings and the rabbi
tells what page to turn to."
The author is hard set against
all pretentiousness in the pulpit
Ho especially warns against the
so-called "ministerial voice."
The old-time rabbi did not
have this problem. He did com-
paratively little speaking. Nowa-
day*, :he congregations demand
above all. a good speaker The
people apparently do not have
the inclination to sit long dayi
and study the sacred writings.
They want an "instant Juda-
ism." so the rabbi is called upon
to crystallize spiritual thought
for the congregation and do it
preferably in not more than half
an ihour.
It is rot an easy task to keep
the attention of a congregation
composed of a variety of peo-
ple of different bak grounds.
There are many pitfalK
"Rabbi Mid a member- 1
congregation, -after t JL'
your sermon i on, v. ""I
5L*' "'*:
"WeU, -id the rabbi to.!
pose am to be con^
'or >>; en you *^*\
food for th ukhf "*
"It wasn'i that, rabbi;
the tnembei You see C
-1'"-!' "lurinj .he dav'i^i
sleep at ni&ht *M
* "" nognai]
*'ants rabbi
foreian News letter By JOSHUA JUSTMAN
The Anns Balance: Facts and Figures
Jerusalem
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS have again focused at-
tention on the problem of the arms balance be-
tween Israel and the Arab countries. A closer look
al the Arab military scene and a review of the scope
01 Arab arming may help put the problem into its
proper perspective.
Western sources estimate that the Soviet Union
has. in the past years, supplied Egypt. Syria and Iraq
w ith one billion dollars worth of arms According
to these sources, the equipment supplied included
^600 tanks. 650 bombers and fighter aircraft. 8 de-
strovers. 11 submarines. 70 torpedoes mounted on
Pacific Newsletter:
12 "Comar" missile boats besides thousands "t
guns of various types and large quantities ot light
er arms.
The bulk of it went to Egypt A spokesman of the
Bonn Government recently revealed that over the
past nine years Egypt had received from the Soviet
Union S700 million worth of arms. These, the spokes-
man said, included 1.500 tanks. 1.500 guns. 200 fight-
ers. 120 Ilyu-hin 20 and Topolev lfi bombers. 80
training aircraft. 40 helicopters, transport aircraft.
submarine*, destroyers and torpedo boats.
These enormous quantities by no means exhaust the
list. They all relate to the past; and to it one should
PHILIP SL0M0VITZ
Hawaii Jewry as Mirror of Tomorrow
Honolulu
THE 50th STATE of the United States
the youngest in the Union, also has|
one of the youngest Jewish communi
ties in America. While there are legend
regarding the presentation of a Toral
to King Kalagaua when Hawaii was
kingdom and before it became an Ameri
can territory in the 1870 or 1880s. tin
fact is that Honolulu's Temple Emanu
El was organized but recently. Its dedi-'
cation took place in May of 1960. and while the Temple
points with pride to the Yad the Torah Pointer in its
Ark as purportedly having come from King Kalakaua.
everything in Jewish ranks here is new
There was a synagogue here before the formation of
Emanu-El The Congregation of the Honolulu Jewish
Community was first organized in 1938. But the common
ity's firmness was established with the construction ot the
permanent house of worship at 2550 Pali Highway.
It is in Honolulu on the island of Oahu that most of
the Jews reside. Only a handful of Jews are to be found
in the other islands Kauai. Molokai, Maui. Hawaii. Lo-
nai. Niihau. Kanoolawe.
In Honolulu, there are said to be as many as 2.000
Jews or more, but the affiliated Jews number 700 or
less. The rabbi of Temple Emanu-El. Dr. Roy Rosenberg,
a graduate of Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. O..
points with pride to the fact that his congregation has
grown, during bis brief ministry since the dedication of
the Temple, from 100 to 160 families. But he believes a
great many more could be enrolled if an interest were
shown by the considerable number of Jewish professors
in the University of Hawaii
Hawaii has become known as one of the most entic-
ing vacation spots in the world, and tourism may. eventu-
ally, bring to these islands many more permanent sett-
lers. A speculator in Jewish population trends even sug-
gested that perhaps a Lubavitcber or some other Hasidic
group may decide to come here and revolutionize Jewish
life.
Meanwhile, this is a settlement farthest removed from
traditional observances. There are regular Friday night
services at Temple Emanu-El. and Rabbi Fishel Pearl-
mutter, the Conservative Navy chaplain stationed at
Pearl Harbor, tells us he gets at least 60 or more Jewish
serviceman at Friday night services he conducts at the
Pearl Harbor Chapel. There may be more than 300 Jew
Ish servicemen in this strategic military area
Vet. kosher meat is secured by Rabbi Pearlmutter only
for himself and. he states, for only two or three other
Jewish families, occasionally. Such kosher products must
Ih shipped to Hawaii from Los Angeles a 2.900-mile dis-
tance from Honolulu.
There were two rabbis who preceded Rabbi Rosenberg
the late Dr. Francis Hevesi. a former chief rabbi of
Hungary, and Rabbi Alexander Segel Both had helped
provide kosher meats for a larger number of families
during their ministry here. Observing Jews who required
kosher food products nave since become nil.
The 700 affiliated Jews represent the largest number
of Jews who can be reached with a Jewish appeal. There
are many members of the University of Hawaii faculty,
but few show a Jewish interest.
A prominent Hawaiian Jewish engineer, echoing Rab-
bi Rosenberg s sentiments gave another view of Hawaiian
Jewry that it is a test-tube for the study of the luture of
American Jewry.
As We Were Saying: By ROBERT E. SEGAL
Immigration Reform Now Ahead?
IT IS NOW more than a half cen-
tary since the British Foreign
Secretary. Sir Edward Grey, watch-
ing the clouds of World War I grow-
ever darker, said: "The lamps are
going out all over Europe; we shall
not see them lit again in our lite-
time."
Meanwhile, the great, warm
light in the lamp of the Statue of
Liberty has flickered and nearly died insofar as the
flame in the torch beckons a welcome to newcomers
to this nation. Sen. John L. McClellau. of Arkansas,
has been puffing at the lamp by saying: "1 don't
think we ought to let this country get flooded with
immigrants. We've got enough of an unemployment
problem as it is."
And Sen. Sam J Ervin Jr.. of North Carolina, has
tried to outsmart those working desperately to strip
the McCarran-Walter Immigration Law of its nation-
al quota principle. In a strong defense of immigration
from the presently favored nations England,
Scotland. Ireland, France, Germany, the Nether
lands, and the Scandinavian countries Sen. Ervin
says President Johnson, in his immigration reform
proposals, may well be giving us new discrimination
in the guise of weeding out the old discrimination.
Sen. McCarran and Rep. Walter, the man so con-
spicuously identified with the prejudiced aspects of
the law as it now stands, have both passed from
the scene. Where the powerful Congressman Walter
once sat in his role as arbiter of immigration policy,
Rep. Michael A. Feichan. of Cleveland, now sits.
And recent reports filtering through from Cleve-
land and Washington would indicate that the Ohio
lawmaker may be amenable to going along with
President Johnson's sharp desire to see the na-
tional origins quota maohanism smashed through
passage of the widely-supported 1965 immigration
reform proposal.
add new arms deaN recentl
eluded, or now negotiated
Soviet Union with Egypt, Sj
Iraq. A recently-concluded
Moscow provides for heav> bombers, and nuanl
u.nk< for Egypt's second armored divukn7i3
"Comar"' torpedo boats and advanced types of k|
stroyers. It was in connection with this new ami
deal that the Soviet Deputy Defense Minuter nil
commander of the fleet, Admiral Gerechkoretail
paid a ten-day visit to Egypt at 'he headofalaj
military mission.
A Syrian military mission returned several (sj|
ago from Moscow, where an arms deal was m\
eluded. The mission's visit, incidentally. comci&M
with the internal rapprochement between the niiij|
Ba'ath Party and the Communists whose esoatj
leader. K ha led Bakhdash. was permitted to rets* [
and with the hanging in Damascus of two Amenta |
"spies."
In Baghdad, the Iraqi duel ot staff last
announced that "mest modern aircraft" have m
l>een acquired for the Iraqi Air Force and dq
are known to be Soviet MIG-21 and a forerunner^
more aims to come. Moreover, liitormed quarts
believe Iraq's ruler. Col. Aaref, has now decided*
abandon the hitherto pursued line of balancing at
arms acquisition between the East and West ads
switch over completely to the Soviet I'nion. TheiB
that the Soviet Chief of Staff is shortly to visit Im,
indicates that Moscow is quite Milling and rea)
to undertake the task of becoming Iraq's prow*
One should add that, in the past. Aaref hast*
reluctant to take this step But lie has apparent.
been pressured into it by Nasser, whose officers a
now very active in Iraq, followh igreemesltl
vi.-aging the ultimate unification ol the Irani at
Egyptian armies
Capitol Spotlight: By MILTON FRIEDMM
The New U.S. LiuJ
Was! |
THE STATE DEPARTMENT is back-
ing away from comnvtment- on l!
rael's security. U.S. officials are noj
longer disposed to publicly rephrase the |
assurance given Israel last year by Pres
ident Johnson.
President Johnson has now turned
the entire Arab-Israel complex over into
the hands of the State Department. Thai
new State Department line is that the
immediate threat to peace in the mar ^^j.
Israel rather than the Arabs. Officials have m
that Israel has been given firm armngap
rsion **
ulionfd'
........w- -,|
tempting a military' response to Arab diversion __
water sources. The Arabs have al.-o bean ""
military moves against Israel, but M,ia' ogj)a1
ming would be within Arab territory, this
considered the same as armed agrestW
The State Department has sought to ev JJ3
application for arms following the l,oim ,,.,,* |
The Department "
pressed by Egyptian President Nasser SjMJ
of arms contracts. The Department .^'aU|^"Be1
the presence of American tanks in GelTO!
Israel.
sbip*l
Since Soviet arms continue P"l,nnK Ltin> H
Department is forced to make M""e ^^1^
ing Israel meet military needs I he > 'p ^aP
like to avoid this "Soviet trap" of en,l^7rm,iiS
States on the unpopular Israeli side ot fjfjJ jd*|
which the Communist bloc would be ""
Arab front. nco
An American formula has finally been c rf
United States will offer a new. '"^'^r^JI
training from supplying major arms i ^m
making limited exceptions on a case-D. nittM'l
need exists. Arms will be sent to Israel
ited quantities from time to time

. April 30, 1965
+JfnisHlf>rikftor
Page 15-A
ggpaiMMMMMMMimiRMnNnaMMMMMMamM
A Sick Chief
By MAX LERNER
Top U.S. Diplomat in Israel
JCow that both houses of Congress have passed versions of the
IBayti-Collcr Amendment on the succession to the Presidency, we
I all lirt'ailip more freely when a conference group irons out the dil
Ice* and when three-quarters of the states ratify the amendment,
anniversary of FDR's death and the centenary of Lincoln's
Inatlon, both in a single week, remind us again that Presidents
nortal The amendment is a sensible one in providing that the
[president shouki nominate a man to fill the vacant Vice Presi-
kal chair and that a majority vote of both houses will make him
[president.
It mipl'l be argued that a Vice President succeeding to the Presi
k should hold it only for an interim period until a special elec
[car be held, on the ground that he might be a mediocre man
i sin event that no one should sit in the White House unless he
(een directly elected to it. But this could be cumbersome and un |
ng. The burden should be placed on the national parties to pick I
[vice Presidents as well as Presidents. Increasingly we are com-
understand that every year we elect not just one President but
. the second a spare and that both had better be good enough i
I entrusted with the awesome power of the Presidency, potentially j
active as well as creative.
Ve need to make a fight soon to ratify the amendment, in every
But the crunch of it lies not in the problem of a Presidents
h. but of his "disability" or "inability" to discharge his office. '
the crunch of that crunch if I may use a barbarism has to do
(mental disability rather than physical illness.
The new amendment says that if a President is too sick, physic- ]
mentally, to give way to the Vice President, the decision that he ;
able to continue can only be made by the Vice President with a
rity of the Cabinet; That it will take the same group to override
kktci I seeking to resume his office, and on a showdown that
ill need two-thirds of Congress as well. In a complex problem
strikes me as a procedure preserving an effective succession
guarding against a possible usurping cabal. To those who fear that
ens the door to a revolution by a Latin American Junta, the role
he two-thirds Congressional majority should be an adequate
pie doubts remaining in my mind don't involve the amendment,
he problem it-elf, which has become almost an insoluble one. We
the high incidence of mental breakdown in modern urban up-
cultures, under today's tensions. We know that the ordinary
ons are multiplied in the White House. We know that in an age
kerkill weapons, the head-of-state. whether in Russia, America.
re and presently China has immense power for destmctiveness.
ily we know, as Dr. Mortimer Ostow pointed out in an important
in the Times last Oct. 11, that "destructiveness is an intrinsic
onent of all mental illness."
* *
It know these things, but there remains the question of when a
i ill enough to be dangerous to the nation and the world. Many of
neurotic in one way or another, but when can a President be
ged psychotic? The amendment is based on the theory that the
working most closely with him the Vice President and Cab-
would be most likely to sense dangerous changes in him. But
en they detect the line between a willful and even arbitrary
! and a really sick chief a truly deranged one? And then there
I Question (raised in the Ostow letter) about a character disorder,
Wear insanity, which may lead him to destructive policies as
[Hitler and Stalin.
The problem then is not the fabled one of who will bell the cat:
amendment is clear on that it is to be the Vice President and
bet.
* #
Presidents then are not only mortal: They are also human, living
human tensions, often strengthened by them, sometimes dam
It n is true that a man's breakdown is in part related to the
pS i i ins work, then I suppose one possible contingency for the
Hential office would be paranoia. With his uncanny flare for the
per one topic ol the hour. Fletcher Knebel. who gave us "Seven
y," has written a new novel "A Night of Camp David."
| published next month which deals with exactly that contin-
to return to it when i' i- published,
THE WEEK... AS I SEE 17
Continued from Page 4-A
Jamly guilty, if only as manifestations of their rebelliousness
If these become more understandable.
I B> understandable,'' I of course mean as Soviet methods of
Wa to -rips with and neutralizing the Jewish will toward indc-
pnee. Both independence and rebelliousness are. patently, two
racteristics intolerable to the Kremlin.
At the outset of the Revolution, history suggests the Jews were
peted to be the most natural supporters of the new Soviet society.
Philosophic Marxist and Leninist condemnation of anti-Semi-
'- a clear case in point. What has happened since then? And
M can demonstrations and petitions do to turn the tide? For some
| Words on this, next week.
'rogressing with Our "Many Satisfied Customers"
ANOTHER LOCATION FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
COULTON BROS.
'ART" "MAURY" "NAT" YOUR TEXACO BOYS _
JERUSALEM l JTA) Phillips
Talbol, U.S. Assistant Secretary of
State for Near Eastern and African
Affairs, conferred this week with
Premier Levi Eshkol and Mrs.
Golda Meir. Israel's Foreign Min-
ster. No details were given on the
talks, but it was assumed that Arab
threats to divert Jprdan River
headwaters to deny the water to
Israel was among the principal
tcpics of the talks.
It was also assumed that there
was an exchange of views
based on the American diplo-
mat's talks with President Nas-
ser of Egypt and other leaders
he met on his current tour of
Arab capitals.
Newsweek magazine reported
that "the United States was nego-
tiating a deal with Israel, calling
for direct shipment of American
munitions." According to the pub-
lication, the Israelis are expected
"to get significantly more weapons
from the U.S. directly than they
were getting through Germany" to
balance the Russian shipments of
planes and missiles to Egypt.
News Consultant Speaks to Club
Democratic Club of Miami Beacli
' met recently at the Sea Isle Hotel.
Guest speaker was Samuel Lieb-
jerman, NBC news consultant.
i whose toDic was "The Medicare
Bill and the Hospital Problem."
Club President Wally Gluck dis-
cussed the coming Miami Beach
elections and also appointed a cam.
paign committee.
Foral Way & S.W. 27th Ave.
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When they tell you the apartments are luxurious .
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When they tell you the features are the finest. .
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residence management valet shop laundry
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When they tell you the pleasure facilities are the best.
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shuffleboard courts 18-hole putting green
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Club 1 is holding a regular meet-
ing and Mother's Day celebration
at 1 p.m. on Thursday. May 6.
Washington Federal. 1234 Washing-
ton Ave. Mrs. Celia Duoerstein will
be honored as Club 1 Mother of the
Year.
The club is also celebrating Is-
rael's Independence Day with a
lunoheon at the Royal Hungarian
Restaurant on Monday noon. May
10. Cuest speaker will be Joe Mal-
ek who will also present a recital.
Mrs. Joseph Krantz is president ot
Club 1.
Beba Idelson Club will have
'doable celebration on Sunday noon
ions
*n,li
Hotel
Mr" iibaniaa
' -ebrate.

L April 30. 1965
-JenistFtcr/dltor
Pacre 3-B
Hadassah Groups Set Installations On Miami Beach
from Thailand at Technion in Haifa, Israel, meet
[Mrs. Trudy Hamerschlaq durinq her recent visit to the
mel campus of Technion, Israel Institute of Tech-
Foreiqn students at Technion include also younq
n Napal. Burma and many other countries of Asia
Mrs. Hamerschlaq is now on her way to attend
,! Conference of the Women's Division, American
>
J ; : membership and a vice president of the Wo-
i n, Miami Beach Chapter.
All Miami Beach Hadassah
groups will install new slate- at
1 noon luncheons durinq May.
Morton Towers Group will hold
its installation at the Algiers Ho-
tel on Thursday, May 6. Mrs. Hat-
tie Wagner will be soloist, and an
original installation skit will be
"resented with member participa-
tion. Mrs Bmanuel Mentz is pies
I ident. and Mrs. Samuel Goldberg
is chairman of the day
Emma Lazarus Group will hold
lits ceremony at the Deauville Ho-
tel on Monday. May 10. Chairman
of the daj is Mrs. Norman Myers
Installing officer is Mrs. Samite]
Sakrais. "Tevya and His Five
Fair Ladies," an original musical
play, directed bj Mrs, Barney
li seph, will be presented.
Henrietta Siold Group will have
it- affail it the \! lers Hotel on
Monday. Ma> 10 Mrs He B
Wernick will be installing officer.
Mrs. Rose Hochstim is chairman
Of the day. Musical entertainment
will be offered by Mrs. Joseph
Mondres in songs accompanied at
the piano by Mrs. Olga Bibor
Stern.

Forte Towers Group has slated
the evenl for Tuesday. May 11. at
the Algiers Hotel. Rabbi Henrj
B, Wernick will install Mrs. Her-
man Keller as new president.
Musical program will be offered
by Mrs. Joseph Mondres. with Olaa
Bibor Stern at the piano. Mrs.
Morris Strully is chairman of the
day.
Esther Group will install new
officers and board members on
Thursday, May 13, at the Algiers
Hotel. Mrs. Samuel Sakrais will
be installing officer. A program of
songs will be presented by Mrs.
Josi ph Mondres. accompanied by
Olga Bibor Stern at the piano.
Kahaner Women To Close Season
The year's final meeting of the
Mollie Kahaner Sisterhood "t Tem-
ple Beth Torah will be held Wed
nesday evening, B:30 p.m., in the
Temple Social Hall.
Rabbi Max A. Lipschitz will con-
jducl the installation ceremi ij ol
"hi Sisterhood officers. There will
be a musical program.
President of the 196546 season
will be Mrs. Stanley Stein. Her -lit?
of officers includes Mesdames Bur-
ton Young. Ben Karp. GeoTg !
Goodman, Adrian Kaufman.
Merman. Max Breslow, Martin Wal-
fish, Richard Snieder, Louis
ter, and Martin Engler.
The evening will be under the di-
ll of Mrs. Martin Matz
,i:n vice president.
WITH
ENTER
SWEEPSTAKES
AS OFTEN AS
YOU LIKE
SEE RULES BELOW

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3. You may enter at often as you wish, but each)
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* All entries must be postmarked not later than
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5 Winner of prize described above will be selected
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Transportation to New York pier and other
expenses not included.
6. Sweepstakes Is open te at! residents of the
United States except in Florida, Missouri and
Wisconsin, and employees of General Foods
Corporation, its subsidiaries. Its advertising
agencies, the Judging staff, and their families.
7. Any liability for federal, state, and local taxee
will be the respcnsibHrry of the winner.
a No purchase necessary to enter.
AT YOUR STORE
However, if booklets are not available at your store-
Enclose instant Yuban label with request and address tot

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National Council of Jewish Women
Sets Annual Installation Luncheon
Carillon Hotel will bo the setting
for the annual installation lunch-
eon on Wednesday. 11:30 ."..m., of
Greater Miami Section. National
Council of Jewish Women.
Theme of the installation. "A
Woman's Plr.ce in the World." re-
peats the theme of National Coun-
cil's biennial convention held at
the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New
York City in March.
Mrs. Sidney Lewis. Section past
president, and a national board
member, will induct the slate head-
ed by Mrs. William I. Brenner, who
will serve a second term as presi-
dent
Other Section officers are vice
presidents, Mesdajnes Edwin B. op-
penheim, Harry Orleans. Harold
Zeeman. Irving L. Wexler. Charles
Rosenberg; secretaries. S. Charles
Fisher. Ben Zion Ginsburg, Wil-
liam S. Altman. Arthur Gilbert;
Marvin L. Zank. treasurer.
Also to be installed will be offi-
cers of the eight divisions com-
prising the Section. Presidents are
Bay, Mrs. Robert Childs; Coral.
Mrs. Louis Schnoidei man; Eve-
ning, Mrs. Cerald Kogan; Indian
Creek. Mrs. Mil.on Gross; Islands.
Mrs. Robert Somerstein; Shores,
Mrs. Larry Hoffman; South Dade,
Mrs. Burton Levey; Lincoln. Miss
Elsie Sohwabe.
Feature of the afternoon will bo
presentation of awards to the fol-
lowing for outstanding community
service: Mrs. David Dvoskin, Mrs.
Milton Cash, Mrs. Barney Sehu
cart, Mrs. Karl Elon. Mrs. Mikon
Ratner.
Special awards will be presented
to Mrs. Herman Bergren and Mrs
Morris Gustman for more than
3.000 hours of volunteer sen ice in
Council's local Thrift Sh. ;>s.
MBS. WILLIAM BftlNNLft
Dr. Tucker to Speak
Dr. Morris Zucker will address
the Health and Happiness Club at
a meeting Friday. 7:30 p.m.. in
Washington Federal Auditorium
1234 Washington Ave. Harry Ker-
shaw is moderator. Discussion will
he on "Health Conservation and
Socialized Medicine in England
Four Presidents
Installed Here
Four chapter presidents of Asth-
matic Children's Foundation of
Florida were to be installed at a
.joint ceremony on Thursday. 8 p.m..
at the Algiers Hotel.
Mrs. Milton Koch is president of
the Florida Council of Presidents of
the Asthmatic Children's Founda-
tion of Florida, which coordinates
the work of the local chapters
| New chapter presidents are Mrs.
Sidney Goldberg, Miami Beach;
Mrs Martin Rolnick. John F. Ken-
nedy: and Mrs. Sylvia Bujaky,
South Dade.
All chapters were to present pro
coeds of fund-raising projects of
the year, to be used in the Resi-
i dential Treatment Center in North
\ Miami Beach for the care and treat-
ment of severely intractable asth-
matic children. The Center, which
is non-profit and non-sectarian, is
the first of its kind in the South
east.
Installing officer was to be Sam-
uel L. Seltzer, president of the
Asthmatic Children's Foundation
,of Florida. Life membership cer-
tificates were to be presented by
Israel Friedman, executive vice
president of the Foundation, to
Mrs. Doris Finberg. Mrs. Howard
FridaY. April;
S. Ronald Pallot
1:1 Norton Tire c
Ucipatec'
sales
i
vice i
omj
'" a regional I__
** seminar of ^ ^
pompanj one of 2?S
branch stores \J?'i3
* to We* hSJgJi
_
Siyum Hasefrl
At Beth TfiMi
Sisterhood of Congn-fc
Tfilah will present ihTT
with a Scfer Torah *?1
, Hosefer" on Sunday
Starting at 2 p.m.. theuj
ah will be tarried unfc|J
opy from the homeofJir^J
Israel Greeuoerg, 831 ioaa*
companied to the -ymf^t
procession ;uul music.
Rabbi Joseph E. Rk*I
planning ., program for IiTh
bration
MRS. SIDNtr LtWIS
Medical Center
To Get Proceeds
From Festival
al Chapter. American Medical
Center al Denver, uill hold its
Sprin I' ttival m trga ib I on
Sunday al the Electricians Hall,
! \W 17th Ave Dinner is tram
5 to 7 p.m
Mrs Irving Rubinstein and Mrs
Not n.. n Gold chairmen
the affair, w rich will also
i o .. live band and enter-
lent.
to the hospital in
Denver I":- f:< e care and treatment
< i inc< r patients, regardles ol
i creed
Farband Branch
Meeting Tuesday |
Chaim Weizmann Branch of For
band will hold Its regular meeting
< Tuesday, 8 p.m.. al Washington
federal Auditorium, Normandy
Isle
-t speaker will be Councilman
Hyman GaJbut Topic is 'Miami
Beai To aj Question and an-
Bwer period will follow
The branch announced postpone-
ment of its annual dinner scheduled
: ir -i.nay. May 2. due to the out
ica] illness of Co-Ohairman Irving
Sachs, Chairman of the branch is
Alee Levin.
Jane English
Is Traveling
On the Continent
Jano English, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs Arthur H. English, of
I 170 lfith St.. Miami Beach, has
been forwarding her parents col-1
orful postcards from Italy. Spain
; v.
A student at the Sorbonne. Jane
i- taking a spring break from stud-
ies and seeing some of Europe's
sights A graduate Of Miami Beach
High in 1962. she is studying po-
litical science, Russian and French
arid plans a diplomatic career
She's in the top three percent of
her class at the Sorbonne and will
return to New Orlean- this fall to
< nter Sophie Noucombe as a sen-
i i where she si wiled last year.
.lane's fither is general manager
t#f the Robin Hood. Miami.
ll.lp in. Mrs Jerry RkjJ
Joseph Alter and Willie p*
I

April 30.
1965
+Jenist) ITlnir ffrtirtr
Paqe 7-B
, to be installed at Temple Or Olom on Friday eveninq
; to righ'1 Eli King, temple president; Jack Lubin, Men's
Resident; and Mrs. Murray Rosenberg. Sisterhood pres-
Iwith Rabbi Samuel April, spiritual leader of the temple,
M conduct the ceremony.
Installation At Or Olom
(filiation of Temple Or followed by a formel Oaeg Shabbat
Seers will be conducted ghosted by Mrs. Wallace Lazarus,
amuel April and Cantor I
Inian during late Friday
Golds to Mark
50th Anniversary
Sunday Afternoon
Celebrating their golden wedding
anniversary, L.Mia and. Maurice
Gold, 729 Meridian Ave., will be
f'ted on Sunday afternoon by their
luce sons, two daughters and their
spouses.
Party will be hold at the home
Of daughter, Rosamond and Sam-
uel Fletcher. 5761 S\V 1(1 St.. with
i'ssist from co-hosts, second daugh-
ter, Anita and Fred llirsclmrn. the
Leonard Holds, the Stanley Golds,
and from Brockton Mass.. Herbert
Cold.
An her must will be the hon-
oree's brother. Charles Gold, also
from Brockton, where the senior
Goicltliyed. until i !;.:>
Residents of Miami for the past
10 years, the anniversary couple
have 12 grandchildren.
Treasurer is Honored
Miami Friendly Social Club will
honor Joseph Braff, treasurer >
the club, on his 80th birthday thi*
Sunday, 2 p.m.. at Beth El Congre-
gation. Program will include mu-
sic. Cocktail hour will follow at J
p.m., and dinner is scheduled for
5 p.m. Max Garshag is club presi-
dent.
Cantor Named to Officiate
Cantor Emanuel Mandel will eon-
duct Friday evening and Saturday
morning services in the recently-
dedicated Max and Fannie Land
Synagogue at the Jewish Home for
the Aged.
MR. AND MKS. MAMMCI G010
Cedars Auxiliary
Maps Installation
Cedars of Lebanon Hospital Aux-
iliary will install new officers at a
luncheon on Tuesday, May 11, at
Westview Country- Club.
President Mrs. Ted Lotterman
has apsinted Mrs. Lawrence Ad-
lev reservations chairman, and Mrs.
David Hess as publicity chairman.
Tickets may be obtained from
Mrs. Adler.
Orthodox Jews
Will Celebrate
Orthodox Jewish community of
Greater Miami will celebrate the
inth anniversary of the independ-
ence of the State of Israel on Sun
day, May 9. 8 p.m.. at the Hebrew
, Academy.
Under the auspices of the Miz-
, radii Hapoel Hamizrachi. Relig-
ious Zionists of America, the func-
tion will be free to the public
Special prayers and a musical
prcgram will be offered by prom
incnt rabbis of the area and can-
I tors.
Rev. Joseph Kranz is president
of the local branch. Rabbi A. H.
Safra and Jack Ciment are vice
presidents. Sol Rashin is national
j representative of Mizrachi Hapoel
' Hamizrachi.
the slate for 1965-66 are
succeeding Samuel Put-
as president; M e 1 v i n
Bart Reinhardt, vice presi-;
Edwin Horowitz. Miles Ea-
Jordon Matlin, secrctar-
li.in Seidman, treasurer.
,od officers include Mes-
furray Rosenberg, presi-
dium Green, Chick Good-
Pi ilip Zelman, Gerald
Eli King, vice presi-
Kelvin shake. Max For-
Solo, secretaries; William
, treasurer. Mrs. Al Lev-
utgoing president,
a third term as Men's
e.-idcnt i- .lack Lubin. Oth-
N> are l)c Bert Kleinman.
Insburg, vice presidents;
Solomon, Ralph Fistel. sec-
ts and ceremony will be
[men's Circle
\s Installation
nen's Circle Branch 1059.
pleach, has elected the foi-
officers for the coming
Mildner, chairman; Ber-
fust. Dr Nathan Marx, vice
Murray Gold, financial
f, and Mrs. Hubert Durst,
secretary.
latit.n it officers will be
n. May H, at the Caril-
ith a dinner and show.
8 osevelt will be installing
|yn Tubin
lor Luncheon
while for Robyn Tubin
f, City of Hope, will be ini-
1 "i a flonor luncheon on
pay at the Diplomat Coun-
piday, May 9, the group's
Jjnncr dance will be held at
pllon Hotel, and on Thurs-
B> 13. a white elephant sale I
to be held during the reg-
1 'lily meeting.
I> will be climaxed with in
n of new officer* on Satur-
22, at the Deauville Ho-
|1 i- Brooks is president.
Jacob
*s Officers
Pl 'i i served Congrega-
nt Jacob during 1964-65 wen'
1 : another term at the an-
petion meeting Apr. 20. New
psdeni will be Philip Nem-
'- headed by Morris B.
Resident; Aaron Lerner,
B. Krevat. Nemirovsky,
residents; Marcia Liber-
['" treasurer; Louis Baida,
rencUer, secretaries.
GOOD
THINGS
IN
JEWISH
LIFE
RIchf lavor and mellow ta'am have made Maxwell
House by far and away the best loved coffees
In Jewish homes. Their matchless quality has
been constant for three generations-constant
In giving Joy and good cheer at meal time, re-
freshment time, holi-
daysand every day. Why
not have a cheering cup
of Maxwell House Cof-
fee right nowl... Regular
In 1 and 2 lb. cans; or In-
stant In 2, 6 and 10 oz.
Jars..
Good to the last drop!
#\*i*i*]

Page 8-B
(Mettisft flcrMiairi
Frid.
aY. April 30,.
600 ATTEND THIRD SEDER CELEBRATION
Miami Medical Center in Beersheba Cited
By Undersecretary of Labor John Henning
Pt
ilore than 800 S ith Florida com
initj leaders heard United States
, i(i-i en "... i I Labor Jthn F.
ning praise the establishmem
the G eater Miami Rehabilita-
Medical Center in Beersheba,
iel, as l.he> gat lered for the an-
il Third S ler celebration in
mi i!i ach
-pon.- red b) the Greater Miami
i uncil for Mi di< al Sen ices in Is-
r. K v ioi.:n. the dinner meet-
, ai the Fontainebaaau Hotel
ised more than $38,000 to pur-
. ;.>e medical equipment for the
ersheba Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rifkin, of
Miami Beach, honorees at the
Third Seder, were joined by Mr.
and Mrs. David Rifkin, of Wilkes
barre. Pa., in a surprise an-
nouncement that each couple was
: ontributing $6,000 to the Rehabil-
ation Medical Center.
rhe local Ritkins. industrialists
. ianii Bcr.ch and Wilkes-Barre.
I ive established the Harriet and
.oh Rifkin Physiotherapy Dcpart-
i ent at the center. Jacob's broth
David, and his wife made the
ip to Florida expressly to join in
' e city-wide salute to their lead-
-hip for Israeli causes.
lack S. Popick. co-chairman of
i e Greater Miami Council for
. edical Services in Israel, of which
.'cob Rilkin is chairman, served
- general chairman of the Third
fc*>der Celebration.
Moe Levin, chairman of the Ar-
n ngemeots Committee tar the din-
r. and chairman of the Executive
Committee of the Israel Histradrut
c -mmitteo of Greater Miami, ex-
iided greetings and inUoduced
} opkk.
Cantor David Conviser. of Temple
tli Sholoni (,f Miami Bea.'i. and
special clK'ir presented a modern
nditicn of the llagnaddah. which
. mbined traditional Hebrew songs
th modern Israeli music.
Popick reported on his recent
Mother's Day
Celebration Set
Mizrachi Women of America. Ha-
kvah Group, will celebrate Moth-
's Day at the Royal Hungarian
eataurant on Tuesday noon.
Proceeds will be used to support
T e "Save a dild" project in Is-
el. Mizrachi Women focus their
lention on religion-, secular and
dustrial training, thus keeping
step with Israel's needs.
Mrs, Morris Bienenfeld is over-
I chaiiman of the annual project.
rs. Jacob D. Davis is chairman of
' le day.
trip to Israel, during which he
visited the Beersheba Center and
attended the meeting of the Board
of Governors of the Hebrew Uni-
versity cf Jerusalem, on which
bcav he sits.
Pcpick joined L'ndi secretary
Henning in lauding the role of
Kupat Holim in providing medical
services fcr more than two-thirds
ol the population of Israel
Sam Feinstein, president of the
Israel H;sT;:dut Committee, extend*
ed greetings.
Mrs Anna Brenner Meyers, hon-
orsrj chairman of the Third Seder
and receipienl
Won.an of the Year" award last
vcar. commended Mr and Mrs.
Jacob Rifkin for their inspiring
and dedicated service to the estab-
hi hment and upbuilding of the State
of Israel through their devoted
leadership, service and material
contributions "
Dr. Irving Lchrman. chairman of
the l%.i Combined Jewish Appeal,
asserted that he was "impressed
anew during my most recent trip to
Israel with the leading role of the
Hlstadrut in securing economic as
well as political independence for
the nation."
Delighted with the success of the Third Seder
celebration of the Greater Miami Council for
Medical Services 'n Israel at the Fontaine-
bleau Hotel are (left to right) Jack S. Popick,
dinner chairman: Rabbi Leon Kronish, honor-
ar>'chaiiman: United States UnderseaeJ
Labor John F. Henning; Mrs. Popick MnV
cob Rifkin; Mis. David Rifkin; Jacob S
henoree along with his wife, end DavidL-
of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., brother of the "o^
Metro Mayor Chuck Hall extended
greetings in behalf of the counts.
Rabbi Leon Kronish, honorary
chairman of the Greater Miami
Council for Medical Services in
Israel, presented a special award
to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rifkin for
their "generosity and foresight
in dedicating their lives to their
fellowman and in particular for
establishing the
department."
physiotherapy
Hal,hi Kronish praised the role of
Moshe Rerman. executive director
11 the Greater Miami Israel Hista
rirut Committee here, in establish-
ing the Beersheba Medical Center
"and in influencing leading Com
nuinal personalities to support the
import.iiit project "
L'nders ireiar> Hem
quenl visit i ;,. i>rael and aJ
thority on the role ol Hi>tad
the Middl Easi countrt'ii
growth sai : the 17th anm
Isri el's independence
i in staunch all> in the Mtkbj
continuing it- almost unbi
strides I self sufndnal
total '
{^oncfratulations to the
STATE OF ISRAEL
on its
I 7th &^vnniv*rs&r\
^
Tribute Dinner
For Post Prexies
I I will hold a tribute dinner, hon-
Brotherhood cf Temple Emanu-
uring past presidents of the or-
..ni/ation CD Tuesday. 7 p.m., in
i kin Hall. Milton Sirkin. presi-
ent of the Brotherhood, an-
xinced.
Those to be feted are Joseph
-below. Jules P. Channing, Judge
ving Cypen. Allen Goldberg. Hj- 1
! in Kout, Dr. Herman R. Mechlo-
it7 and Michael Sossin.
Reservations are being accepted ;
* the temple eft ice and by chair-
lan Ben Cypen.
(
ront
MITCHELL WOLFSON
President
MILTON WEISS
Chairman of the Board
M9'i Bmck in Swim
Henry Moreno, who spent 40
i*ars at seta before retiring to his
Coconut Grove home last year, is
mnr back "in the swim" at Miami
springs Villas as assistant catering
manager, Art Bruns, of the Villas,
aid that Moreno put to sea as a
ro-year-o!d junior purser. His last
cost at seas as executive purser
hoard the SS United States, where
he oversaw 26 galleys and pantries.
S.T.
MIAMI BEACH
[FEDERAL
l SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
mam orncr.
Liacato laat Mail at Waskinfton Avenue IW11
tANCH OFFICES
7M WmttBgm kti, MMai leach .115511 260 Sunny tslts levtmrd, Mia*I Wl M
Ml 7Ut nwt WMai ttacfc K i-SStt 11330 H.W. 7t A*m. Miaial IMN

Apr:. 33. 1965
+J6Wist Meridian
Paqe 9-B
:ayne Point Association to Install
jeers at Annual Banquet Sunday
h-UI be installed president; Herman Caine. Max Or-
Blscayne Point lin. Joseph Ross, vke presidents;
, ', '.'.alien at the Mrs. Alexander Res:, recording se
quet of the organi-itretary; Mrs. Elizabeth Krivitzin,
iii.ii
11 S
;it the Deauville financial secret iry; anil Aaron Tep-
i'i r, ii easun r,
. to i
Ma>
:
Ezi
installed by Miami
Melvin Richard are
chairman of the
egold, honorary
aea Groups
Activities
ichig
I
fetj
i dl se>
ed I :
anizali
, m, Young Ju-
r. announces lor
ral more youth clubs
1 -sail and Zion
: America.
ire
md 6th
e
grade
stu-
to join the two
Judaea .ioups organized at
i;; III. Miami Beach
lubs meet at the temple
I Wednesday and at
rth i 727 77th St.. on
pempli ;' nai sholom. newly
\ Youpj Judaea group foi
will meet on Thursday eve-
i club has scheduled
evenii meetings.
forward Together" is the
fit of an original musical to
sn"d bv Young Judaea
fi and dance group at the
KU i .-.:: cence Day
Miarri Beach
Ihursday, May 6.
Festi-
Auditorium
jectcd by Karen Einkelstein
prichason, (he songtest has
been ; rformed at Hadas-
(I Zionist Organization tune-
|" v the group.
r 200 are expected to attend
rsl banquet open to senior
Judaeana scheduled lor
v, \l., 23. at Beth Moshe
egation
officer? ill be installed in
Indlelightir.g ceremony COO-
i>> Frank Farbenbloom,
least regional director, and an
fcftra tor lancing will be tea-
Mi he atra ..
Past presidents are Ezra Fine-
gi Id, Mi yor Melvin Richard, G d
trey Perell, Ben Ciller. Hilton Gav-
in i and Dr. Edw&rd T. Litt.
Bosrd of Trustees includes
Josc;:h Albert Sr., Mrs. Irving
Gaby, Philip Grenwald, Morris
Hertion, Jacob L. Kram, Bernard
Rosen, Thomas F. Smith, Bernard
Lazarus, Nathan Rattner, Joseph
Rosenblum, Aaron Tepper, Mur-
ray Weil and Mrs. Carola Wein-
berg.
Board of Directors includes Mrs.
.Ii lian Aberman. Mrs. Herbert Al-
ter. Manny Austin, Mrs Fred
Bickman. Mrs. Edmund Burke.
David Dink. Gus Fisher, Vice
Mayor Bernard Frank. Hy Fried,
Mrs. Frances Goldstein. Mrs.
Joseph Greenberg, Mrs. Philip
Grenwald, Dr. David Hendel. Irwin
Levin. Stanley Levine. Mrs. Ed-
ward T. Litt. Sonny Marden. Fred
, Miller. Mrs. Godfrey Perell. Mrs.
Lillian Rogers. Alan H. Rothstein.
! Mrs. Lily Segal. Mrs. Aaron Tep-
per. William Waller. Mrs. William
Waller. Dr. Lawrence Weston and
, Dr. Wilbur Wishner.
Banquet Committee includes Bud
Levin, chairman; David Dank and
Max Orlin, co-chairmen; Mrs. Rita
Singer and Mrs. Susan Levin, hos
, less co-chairmen; Mrs. Lucia Gren-
Avald, publicity chairman; and Hy
Fried and his orchestra, dance
music.
Garden Club Will Install Officers
A parade of hats and accessories '.(tils. Mrs. Byron Top.I. Mis Ben
lorned with fresh flowers will be Samuels. Mrs. Rose Kelemer; Mr;.
Michael shores, recording seer-
tury; Mrs. Theodore Kooli ii, so-
cial secretory; Mrs Irvin Wein-
rcich, treasurer.
ne of the unique features of the
It. Sinai II: spital Garden Club an
ual in tallation.
To be held al the Algiers Hotel
ii Wednesday no n, the affair will
lire I tor the fifth year i>>
is James Abramson.
Mrs. Alex Gorton, president, will
ei nducl the meeting. Mrs. Alex
i nder Iv mii ill gh e the invoca-
Li m, and Mi Hi rbert Frink, an
i i the Flci i'la Federation
is, will be u.-tailing
ficer,
New -1 ite
Bin i
lo be installed ai e Mrs.
president; vice presi-
BOB SCHWARTZ
Hannah Senesch
installation Lunch
Hannah Senesch group of Hadas-
sab plans an installation brunch
Monday, 11:30 a.m., at the Algiers
Hotel.
Progrim Vice President Mrs. An-
i a Reaback is chairman of the day.
Invocation will be given by past
president, Mrs. Arthur Applcbaum.
Mrs Dorothy Krieger Fink will
install the following officers for
1965-66;
President, Mrs. Sylvia Kurland;
\ ice residents, Mrs. Elsie Click.
Mrs. Sigmund Rt-stler, Mrs. Rebec-
ca LipiOn, Mrs. Anna Reaback;
treas irer, Mrs. Lilly llutt; cr< ar-
ks, Mrs Charier, Bushell, Mrs.
Florence Brown. Mis. George
Kcuer. Mrs. Sidney Blcek; parlia-
mentarian. Mrs. Morris Alpcrt.
A program of music and song will
be offered by Mrs. Sima Swce.
MAYOR MELVIN RICHARD
Beach B'nai B'rith Lodge to Install
Officers at Banquet Sunday Evening
Samuel Nieberg, president-elect
of District Grand Lodge 5 of B'nai
B'rith, will represent the Supiome
Lodge at Sunday night's annual in-
stallation ilinner of Miami
mbersot the banquet commit- Lc
re Lu-t Sreitbart, Pnchason.
tional B'nai B'rith Israel Com-
mittee, and chairman of its in-
augural conference committee.
Harmony Lodge
Planning Panel
Harmony Lodge, B'nai B'rith. will
hold a panel discussion on 'Com-
munity Problems" at Beth Torah.
1051 N. Miami Beach Blvd. on Mon-
daj at 8 p.m.
Panelists will be councilmen of
the City of North Miami Beach,
moderated hy Martin Knobcl, pro-
gram vice president.
Rephu- and Paul Kwitnev.
fpt. Gardner
be Speaker
pilir met tag of Beth Moshe
hood i- planned for Monday
ng, Business agenda, conduct -
[President Mrs. Jay Rand, will
* election of officers,
st speaker. Capt. Leo Gard-
en talk on "Israel's indepen-
A program of Israeli songs
nces will he offered by Miss
Man:', and Samuel Rosen-
bh
er is manager of El
rael v..--
S here.
Dr. Joseph Narot. of Temple Is-
rael, will be principal speaker at
the session which will see Joseph
L. Goodman, vice president of
Franklin Federal Savings and Loan
Association, take office as presi-
dent of Miami Beach's oldest B'nai
B'rith ledge.
Gerald Schwartz, president of a
public relations agency and out-
going lodge president, will re-
ceive a special award for his lead-
ership of the organixation during
the past year. Schwartx is state
chairman of the B'nai B'rith Is-
rael Committee, district vice
chairman, a member of the na-
Judge Jason Berkman, justice of
Beach! the peace fc-r the Fifth District,
I will be master ot ceremonies, with
past president. George J. Talian-
off, serving as installing officer.
MELANDOR NURSERY
Salutes the State of Israel
FRUIT TREES $6.95
AVOCADOES, MANGOES, GRAPEFRUIT, ORANGE,
TANGEIOS, KEYtlMES, PEACHES WITH FRUIT
Adonida PALMS $4.95
- Dwarf Royals 4 to 6 ft.
'21 N.W. 7th AVENUE Wl 7-6971
- i 441-SOOTH OF NEW GOIOEN GLADES INTERCHANGE
Own Daily A Sunday S:30 a.m. I. S:30 .m. Clod Wed.
Cantor Jacob Bornstein, of Tem-
ple Israel, and Mrs. Henry Bala-
ban. wife of the circuit court judge.
head the entertainment program
for the kosher dinner. Additional
entertainment also has been ar-
ranged by a committee headed by
honorary life president. Irving
Sthatzman; incoming vice presi-
dent, Samuel Pascoe; past presi
dent, Samuel Weiner; and past sec-
retary, Louis Goldman.
Nieberg. who will be installed as
president of District Grand Lodge
3 during this summer's convention
in Miami Beadh, is a past president
of his lodge, council and state fed-
eration.
Goodman, moving up from the
pests of vice president and presi
dent-elect, announced that weekly
luncheon meetings of the lodge will
continue at noon Tuesday at the Di
Lido Hotel under the chairmanship
of Deration S. Miller, with Sthatz-
man as co-chairman and Dr. Abra-
ham Wolfson as newscaster.
PORTOFINO
SENDS GREETINGS TO
ALL HIS FRIENDS
on the Observance of the
17th ANNIVERSARY
Of The
STATE OF ISRAEL
Like CHEESE KREPLACH
with
Grandissimo
Ta'am!
Chef Boy-Ar-Dec knows
whiil he's talking about. His
Cheese Ravioli has the
"grandest t..sie'-whether you
lay it in li.iii.m or Jewish or a
mixture of both. Have some
fur lunch or supper today.
CHEF BOY-AR-DEE'
Cheese Ravioli
If you like cheese krepluch.
)<>u"ll love these tenJer little
macaroni pies...filled with
langy Italian Cheese...sim-
nw-rcd with savory tomato
S4UC* and chce e... seasoned
ir> the real Kalian way.
V m, ni! Real Kalian flavor
created by famed C bef Boy-
Ar-Dec. \nj thrifty. Costs
only about I St per serving!
toti
Ravioli
JN SAUC>
H
M 4f&UUu j.iit li^d'n'col!
gathered for you
Miriam Field
SPECIAL
ANNOUNCEMENT
I 've written a book especiallv for
you: it's just off the presses and
it's jours for the asking, abso-
lutel> free, with the compliments
and very good wishes of the
makers of Planters Peanut Oil.
Who cried over the gefilte
fishand li> .'
Whyaretheresoman) stones
on the ancient Judean hills '
Can an outsider actually en-
ter the extraordinary world
ol'VelvelthcVegetable Man?
Why is "un-objectivity" so
delightful in a mother?
What does Madame Grace
Zia Chu reveal about the
closely guarded subtle se-
crets of the Last?
If East is East and West is
West, can the twain really
meet (in the kitchen of
the kosher cook)?
You'll find the answers to these
and other intriguing questions
(plus menu-makings, memories
mood-marinated, >oung wives*
talcs and tantalizing tidbits) ia
the rather unusual little book
I've cooked up for you. Perhaps
never before have you sampled a
cookbook quite like this. Here,
for example, are some of the
culinary highlights:
Mi'icluilim your bubba'sbubba
may have made for her family
(andyou can make for yours).
Honiglekach, holishkes, kugel,
kichelacheven the words art
warming, eacha mouth-water-
ing mouthful of nostalgia.
A kosher cook's tour of China,
India, Frame and Israel. .
for Molt Street Meat Patties,
Memsahib's Pullet Pakistani,
Steak Montparnasse, Chicken
with Golden Apples; each one
is a cosmopolite's delight.
17 sensational recipes for suc-
cess ...to help you rise in your
husband's eyes, score as daugh
ler-in-law. impress the kaffee-
klatsch crowd and emerge as
the mom with the mostest...
each dish foolproof, superbly
simple and simply superb.
YOURS WITH LOVE
AND EMPATHY
In sponsoring this little book
Standard Brands pays a rather
touching tribute to the Jewish
Homemaker with whom the
Company has always had a very
special empathy. For me this
book has been literally a labor of
love. I hope that you enjoy reading
it as much as I enjoyed w riling it.
FOR YOUR FREE COTY OF THB
24-PAGE MANNA ABOUT TOWN
BOOK, SEND YOUR NAME AND
ADDRESS, WITH A LABtMOR YOU
CAN JUST DRAW A REASONABLE
FACSIMILE OF A LABEL) FROM
ANY SIZE BOTTLE OF PLANTEM
OIL.IO:
Standard Brands Incorporated
Manna About Town
P. O. Drawer A
Madison Square Station
New York, New York 10010.
Yottre welcome to order extra
copies for other members of your
Sisterhood or Society.
MANNA ABOUT TOWN
IS A STANDARD BRANDS EXCLUSIVE
EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE BRItHT
Y00NG HOMEMAKER

F:.ge 10-B
*Unist nrridfor
Frid0Y. April
jj-rances aJL^elt
matt
We
the
Women
RUTH
WOMAN OF THe WEEK
Ruth ( Mrs Paul) Faske liked la go fis'iiny with her two
brothers, leave Brooklyn in the summer (or the mountains,
and generally acted a< it she were the third brother instead
ot the one and only sister.,. Her family moved to Sunierviile,
N. J.. where she met her future husband in bjgfc -chool;
it vh a boy girl romance. A victim cf the depression as far
as college was concerned. Ruth stayed at home and became
a frustrated decorator. She is one
n> vvbut not frustrated. Her mar-
ried life in Camden, N. J.. was as
a typi.al housewife with an ador-
able baby. Baby Ronni is today-
married to Eugene K. Garfield and
has a baby of her own, Pamela.
The first randehild is the greatest
thrill that grandparents can have,
according to liu.h.
Tired of the snow and ice up
North, the Feskes moved to Miami
in 1945. Ruth is not a doer in or-
ganization work, except for the
Mondays she spends working with
the (harden Club cf the Women's
Auxiliary of Mt. Sinai Hospital.
She's a joiner, leaving the pleasure
of being a community leader to her husband who several
weeks ago was installed president of the YM and WHA ot
Greater Miami.
Ruth and Paul long ago learned a lesson in humility
not to become smug, because there is no contract that de-
clares that things will always be the same. After building
and decorating a beautiful home, they attended a business
convention in Colorado Springs. While they were away, their
home was hit by a hurricane, and everything blew away but
their daughter. As a consequence. Ruth and Paul have the
same philosophy of life, as well as the same taste in the
antiques and art t.hey collect. They are most grateful for
living in this wonderful South Florida climate.
Sometime ago. they became interested in Dade Heights
Jewish Center, which is now Congregation B'nai Raphael.
Ruth feels that children should learn about religion during
their formative years, and she does her bit to see that oth-
ers receive the training her own child received.
Travel through the United States. Canada. Mexico and
the Islands is a Faske treasure hunt for antiques and paint-
ings to add lo their collection. Five years ago. Paul became
tired of being retired and established Colonial Acres Mobile
Home Park. Ruth works with Paul as social director of
Colonial Acres, finding it both stimulating and a challenge.
She has thrown herself into her work w it,h great zeal, plan-
ning recreation for over three-hundred families, all in dif-
ferent age groups and having varied interests.
In between times, she attends community affairs and
dinners in which her husband is involved, tries to raise
orobida (which hasn't been so successful), continues with
her Fremh Bisque collection I which has been successful).
and tries to show her gratitude for her happy life by help-
ing others
Wynnes to Live
On Miami Beach
i Miss Carole Sue Kupper. daugh-
ter of Dr. and Mrs. Leo R. Kupper,
1005 Shore Ln and Dr. Larry
JSmanueJ Wynne were married on
Sunday, Apr. 2.">. in a double ring
ceremony. The wedding look place
in the Mira-Doral Room of the Dor-
nl Country Club at 12 noon. Rabbi
Joseph Narot officiated.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore an empire gown of
French ottoman with a split shoul-
der train. She was attended by
maid-of-honor. Mrs. Steven Kulvin.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Martin
Baron, Miss Susan Siegel and Miss
Dorothy Moss.
Dr. Wynne, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Wynne, of Quincy. Fla., had
as his best man his brother, Merrill
Wynne. Head usher was Kenneth
Kupper, brother of the bride. Other
u.-hers were Dr. Michael Mat /km.
Dr. Arthur Greene and Donald Sa-
bin.
The new Mrs. Wynne attended
the University of Alabama and the
University of Miami, and has been
associated with a public relations
firm in New York, handling the
Ed Sullivan Show and Four Star
Productions.
Dr. Wynne graduated from Em-
ory University and the University
of Maryland School of Dentistry,
+
THE NEWEST MOST MODERN
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WtDDINGS, ALL TYPIS SOCIAL I COMMIRCIAL
ENGRAVED STATIONERY
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*
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Mandell, Pincuss
Exchange Vows
A double ring ceremony on Sun-
day. Apr. 25. united the former
Marilyn Nan Pincuss and Barnett
Jerome Mandell.
Rabbi Eugene LabovitZ, of Tem-
ple Ner Timid, officiated at the
noon nuptials held at Tony's Fish
Market, where a formal luncheon
followed.
Parents ot the newlyweds are Mr.
and Mrs. Max Pincuss. 7516 His-
panola Ave., and Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Mandell. Orlando. Fla.
New Mrs. Pincuss had her sister.
Mrs. Dale Strickland, as matron of
honor. Deborah Jacoby and Laura
Mandell. the bridegroom's sister.
served as bridesmaids. Fred Fer-
nandez was best man.
The bride selected a floor-length
gown of white bridal satin and alen-
con lace with long sleeves to a
wrist point and a straight skirt.
The French illusion fell from a ti-
ara of seed pearls and she carried
an arrangement of white roses and
orchids.
A graduate of Miami Beach High,
I the bride attended the University
of Florida and at present is attend.
itig Dade Junior College, studying
nursing.
Mr. Mandell is a senior at the
University of Florida, studying
electrical engineering. A graduate
of Orlando Junior College, he is a
member of Sigma Tau. honorary
engineering fraternity.
Israeli Dance Festival
Congregation B'nai Raphael Jun-
ior and Senior USY will participate,
w.th other USY groups of Greater
Miami area, in an Israeli dance fes-
tival to be held at Temple Emanu-
E4 on Saturday at 8 p.m.
Belle Mended
Eyes July Rlte
Miami Beach. U(
fTlV b the
0f Mr ai ; Mrs iwj.-j
son. HOI BOth M Mr f '
son -it Mi an.l Mrs'
n -. 335 Washington aIT
j. Lmversit, c| Mlami J/Jj
| ..mi an alumnus of Delta Si*
International Businia Fn
hand Phi Alpha Delta La* ft
it\
David PinskT
Students Seen
David Pinski Folk SthaJ
sented a nv del Seder on MoakJ
Apr. 19, a) Farband On^"1
,k,., Washington Ave. under a*.
vision of principal, Louis ]
and singing teacher. BinaB3
Children uf the school W
a>id interned at Brooklyn Veterans pated in (he chunting of the}
Hospital. He served as a lieutenant over melodies, and eMenaiaaV
in the Navy. songs and dances. Members
.After a Mexican honeymoon, the S^f"' Mrs I *
couple will live in Miami Beach. "'"
____L-----------------------------------------------. Mrs. A. Bergman. Mrs. M
scheid, Mrs B, Furman.
Max B. Astor is presideaiif
'school
Plastic Surgeon in Toll
Dr Howard Gordan dis.uadtj
h rnational Hope Ship
medical activities at a
lla
Vudil iriuni in North Miami
Dr Gordon, .. plastic surma)
returned from a tour of duty at
ship in Africa, The prosian
sponsored by the North Daiki
led Nations Association. 9s*j
is president.
UIHOIII0 suu
Since !Mi
Mien Ri
MIS. IAMV wrNNf
Artliiini <
MM. BASNET! MANDfU
Spending their honeymoon in the
northern part of Florida, the cou-
ple will make their home in Gaines
ville, Fla.
'*/ HEARING AtD..
^> $75 to $325
STANLEY GOUL
1238 IIKMM POiD i
. uniit I" '
Where Students Are ln
a 11 I'll nil
TUTORING SCHOOL
Please See The Velio* PM'i'l
Your Phone Book or W
pl 7-:
r
IRVING PIETRACKS
ORCHESTRA
SOCIITY'S FAVORITI FOB MAKING ACH AFFAIR
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Famous for making the most beautiful Bar Mitivoh
1 Candle Lighting Cowai- emd Wed-i-js in the World
For Booking JE 80204 No Job Too Small
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HE
You ore cordially invited lo visit the new showrooms oi
MILDRED HULL INTERIORS
reraorir P-b- Beat* new locaiod it 345 Paltrm* Ave
Coral Cetlcs Fleride. Ttlsehsne 44S-1256
LEO HOHAUSER
PLUMBING
CONTRACTING IMPAIRING
Serving Did* County Ovtt JS Ycsre
till S.W.I 4th ST. HI 6-9904
CONSTIPATED?
To prove PRUN EVAC containing
Prunes. Figs and Senna, is world'*
smo-o-o-thest. most natural laxa-
tive, write to PMARMEX, Holly.
wood, Florida, tor big
FREE SAMPLE
Or at your druggist. 40 tablets 7
Over a million sold each year By
makers of Dorma-Rest Sleep Caps.
li
NATURAL & ARTIF0
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' BLOSSOM SHOP
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Call SYLVIA AAILSEN JE ^
FREE DELIVERY ALL GRlM*
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hup
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ENGLISH-SPEAKING. FRENCH- SPA'n M(,nlh
$100.$125 Per Month S200S250 Pt'^jj
NO LEGAL OBLIGATIONS
COUPLE

t, April 30, 1965
+JenistincredHafi
Paqe 113
Friedmans Announce Troth of Rosalyn
To Law Student Charles Bryan Stuzin
MS. STEVEN DWOSKIN
ible Ring Rites
Crawford,
ven Dwoskin
foi mer Wendalyn Louise
| 5225 Alhanibra Circle,
the bride 11 Sloven Dwos-
Saturday evening, Apr. 24,
nple Beth Am, Rabbi Herbert
bard officiated at the double
eremony.
ghtcr of Mrs. William J. Mor
lanil Stanley J. Crawford, the
Jis a graduate of Southwest-
f^li School.
bridegroom graduated from
High and attended Miami-
Junior College. He is the
I.Mr, and Mrs. Harry Dwoakin,
hv Huh si.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Friedman. 237
Velarde Ave., Coral Gables, an-
nounce the engagement of their
daughter, Rosalyn Brenda. t o
Charles Bryan Stuzin, son of Mr.
and Mrs. David Stuzin. 3710 Toledo
St., Coral Gables.
She'll Mary
Philadelphian
Mr. ana Mrs. Al S:hor. 1664 NK
158th St.. announce the engagement
of their daughter. Phyllis M. Schor,
i to Louis Small, of Philadelphia, Pa..
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Small.
The bride-to-be rttcndrd schools
m Miami, and graduated from the
University of Florida in December
She is now teaching in Carol City
Elementary.
The groom-to-be attended schools
in Philadelphia, including Temple
l University.
An Aug. 8 wedding is planned.
A summer wedding is planned.
The bride-elect will he graduated
from the University of Miami in
lune, with an AB in English. She
Is a member of Orange Key lead-
ership honorary, Sigma Delta Tail
Sorority, and received the award
for outstanding freshman at the
university. She earlier attended
-ephic Newcomb College of Tulane
University.
Mr. Stuzin is in his first year at
the University of Miami Law
School. He is a graduate of the
University of Florida, with a BSBA
degree in accounting.
At the university, he was a mem.
ber of Varsity Debate, Alpha Kap-
pa Psi, and president of his social
fraternity. .Alpha Epsilon Pi.
MISS NirUfS SCHOR
'ool Opens To Membership
ing pool of the YM- ol Florida, the pool has been over-
ler Miami, 8600 SW lauled and i- in excellent condition
. will be officially opened for the vide range of swimming
use ol members beginning programs thai the "Y" will offer.
I was announced by A. In charge ol the pool operation
Cutler. for the Y" will be Daniel Cava-
if i: : esl iii the state naugh, swimming coach,
OPEN THE DOOR TO A "FUN" SUMMER !
at the Great
DEAUUILLE
CABANA CLUB
MOTEL
Enjoy a lull season of pleasure and entertainment
.it the world's finest Cabana Club, private
beach and Olympic pool PLUS: all the
enteitamment privileges of the Hotel of the
Stars'' including the fabulous "CAVALCADE
OF BROADWAY" dinner shows of a new
hit musical production, with full casts,
each week V' hours of sheer delight
"Music Man", "Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes", and "Call Me Madam"... and
bingo, wiener roasts, cocktail parties,
Special Holiday Parties and MORE! #
Coll: JOHN FAZIO
Cabana Manager
UNion 5-8511
ON THE OCEAN AT 67th STREET MIAMI BEACH
suddenly ...
fl's MOTHER'S DAY May 9th
Be ready Order Her l'lowers
PROMO NOW TOO A'I !
S WE ABOl T SMI) 0\ Ol T-
OFTOlT\ ORDERS PLACED
by WEDNESD n. HAY ',.
h&it Gorans
CORAL GABLES
6*5 5867
FT LA'JDFRDALE
371-7JM
MIAWI
635-4516
MIAMI F'ACH
532-3361
HOLLYWOOD
94 5-7051
Schissell, Dimond
Plan Marriage
Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Schissell. of
Brooklyn. N.Y.. have announced
the engagement of their daughter,
Barbara Ann, to Alan Theodore
Dimond.
The groom-to-be is the son of
Mrs. Helen Dimond and the late
Solomon Dimond. of Alexandria,
Va.
Announcement ot b*te engagement
was made at the first Seder in the
i.e.me Of Mr. and Mrs M II. I! sen-
house, 5035 Delaware Ave Miami
Beach.
The S:hi-:scll.s have been house-
guests of the Kosenhcuses. Mrs.
Schissell and Mrs. Rosenbouse are
sisters.
The hridc-to-be will receive her
B: dhelor Of Education degree from
the University of Miami in .June.
, She is a member of Sigma Delta
Tail Sorority and Orange Key.
Mr. Dimond is a government
major, and will also be graduated
from the U. of M. in June. He is
past president of Phi Sigma Delta
Fraternity and a member of Omega
Honorary. He will enter law school
hi September,
Mr. and Mrs. Rosenhouse have
been official hosts to Miss Schissell
luring her stay al the University
ol Miami.
Agudath Achim
Receives Gifts
It' uben .1 Kover, \ Ice resident
ol Congregation Agudath \< i*m,
. Hhi- Ave has presented the
congregation with an Eti 'rial l ight.
A Ten Commandments Plaque
d ne in raised gold lett ring has
bi en presented bj John Post,
Sam Weichseibaum, president, is
the donor of an elaborate menorab.
Metro Debate At
Temple Beth Tov
"Metro: Without or Without \
Congratulations To Israel
BOB NOVACK
ORCHESTRAS
INSURE THE SUCCESS OF
WEDD/NGS BAR MITZVAHS
AND All SOCIAL FUNCTIONS
Orchestras-Trios-Accordionists
MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT
UNION 6-5434
WOMAN WISHES TO SHARE
HER BEACH APARTMENT
with lady past 55 years.
Low rental to right party.
Phone MO 7-7415
ONE OF THE LARGEST CONSERVATIVE
CONGREGATIONS IN MIAMI
IS SEEKING A
SEXTON
Must be able to rea* Torah.
All replies strictly confidential.
P.OB. 844, z-vena Visto Station
aicipalitics?" was the topic oi
.Itbate when Metro Commissions
Alex Gordon and Earl Starni n
Morth Miami Mayer Elton GisSi
lanner and Franklin Parson,
tcrney for Dade County I.''ague
Municipalities, recently at TVnu
Beth Tov.
Prof. G. Serino, University of .
imi Department of Governme
DOderated the debate which w
ponsored by Southwest B r a n c

Page 12-B
AJknlst flcricfiar?
Frid
Y. AMj
...
SEA, SAND AND FISH AT WESTVIEW
COUNTRY CLUB
The table was a huge oval, the center built up
of make-believe water, sand and sea shells. Wax
dripping candles and bowks of goldfish on red
checked table clothes completed the scene for the
sea food dinner given at Westview by Diana and
Ernest Janis. Among guests who enjoyed the un-
usual dinner party and cards afterwards were
Maj. and Mrs Albert Warner. Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Blank. Mr. and Mrs. A. Herbert Mathes, Mrs.
Fa) Ablin. Dr. and Mrs. Morris Zimmerman. Col.
and Mrs. Jaci b Arvey. Mr. and Mrs. Jules Gillette
and Mr and Mrs Harrj Yagle
SATURDAY NIGHT ON THE TOWN
Cocktails at Jewish Fanulj and Children's Ser-
vice Holiday in Spain" Art Show proved a stim-
ulating first course before dinner. Everybody was
hither and yon. (".race and B. B Goldstein, with
Rabbi and Mrs. Joseph Narot. went to Chandlers
Dr. and Mrs Stanley Margoshes, Betty and Stan-
ley Spieler. F.thelda and Dr. David Kirsh went
to dinner at Tulio Andres. Dr. and Mrs. Melvin
Becker had to tuck their winning painting in the
back of their car before they went to De Conti-
nental with Miriam and George llirsch. Shirley
and Marvin Rauzin Helga and Bernard Kramar-
sky, Joan and Alan Kahn. I'at and Charles Gold-
stein and Linda and James Ellis and Mrs. Peggy
(". rdon went to Tony Sweets Marcie Ersoff had
a real date with her husband. Bernard, and they
went off by themselves for a gay time. Tema and
Morris Burk were last seen carrying the abstract
they had bough:it was a vivid green and blue
just the eclor of Tema"s dre-v
ANOTHER BOOKANOTHER BAR MITZVAH
Sadie and Sam Greenfield just came back from
Scott-dale. An?., where they attendee! the Bar
Mitzv:m of Sadie's grandchild, Edward, who is
the sen of Dr and Mr- Willard Abraham. Dr.
Abraham who i- with Arizona State University,
and has had thre-e articles appearing in Texlax -
Health"" and one in "Family Circle."
THE WHOLE GAMUT OF EMOTION
Martha 'Mrs Stanley i Myers just came back
from the National Council of Jewish Women's
nvention in New York City, where she was in-
stalled as national vice president. She had her
own cheering section with her. Included in the
Miami delegation was her daughter. Judy < Mrs
Arthur Gilbert. first-time delegate t.> the con-
iM Martha barely had tune to tell S. n how
id at l< itcited .-lie was about Judy, when thej
of( to i'. opening "f the State Legislature
.-it Talli hassee Surrounded bj the traditional
iliiv v in-. Rep. Kenneth Myers, first-time
. 1. _i>!ator. allowed his mother to press the
Emenu-EI Will
Celebrate 25th
Anniversary Here
Temple Emanu-El will hold its
r anniversary celebration and
installati n ball on Sunday night,
May 30, a! the- Diplomat llote-1
The function will pay tribute to
Joseph Lipton. outgoing president,
Max Boderman, incoming pres-
ident,
Jack Carner is chairman of the
anniversary ball and treasurer of
Temple Bmanu-EI Carner 1- a past
Chairman of the Combiner! Jewish
Appeal of Greater Miami and a
trustee of Mt. Sinai Hospital.
JACK CARNER
Nautilus Student Wins Contest
tptimtsl Zone 13 Oratorical fi
hals, bringing together the winners
oi the six local Optimist Clubs, was
won by Sidney I'ortroy. a ninth
p.ra'ler at Nautilus Junior High
Si hool.
iie represented the Bay Harbor
Surfs i timist club as contest
winner. Second plase went to Da-
vid I.itt. a tenth grader at Miami
I
the winner i f the Nor-lsle Optimist
ciub contest
Hadassah Oneg Shabbat
Mr-, rack Wolf? "in. president,
[ 'i !r\-i !.; /,:i'i- Group I f Iladas-
sah. annt im an < meg Shabbat to
I held at the home of Mrs. J.
( i '-"'in ft?: Byron Ave.. on Set-
urday Mrs. Jacob D Davis will re-
'Jews in the Middle Ages."
aces
button lor his first vote. Now Martha is home
tiying to settle down.
THE QUARTET IS TOGETHER AGAIN
sylvia. who was a Farr. and her husband. Harry
Solomon, it Fairtawn, N. V with Irene Farr
Schlessinger and Bill Fair, were included in the
t. :nih dinner at Myra and Aaron Fair's for the
traditional holiday dinner. The old quartet burst
into song every time the Hagaddah said so.
TO JACKSONVILLE
Ida and Fddie Cannier packed their three kids.
Howard. Cathy and Carol, into the car and whi/./.eil
awaj to Jacksonville to Grandma's house, the
Archie Puldys. for Passover dinner and a long
weekend. They have bucket seats in their Grand
Prix, and everything starts out quite normally,
with Ida in the front seat and the chilelren in the
back. 'Ihti! gradually, one by one. they start
creeping over the little empty -pace between the
front two seats; and there they are. all live m
the two front bucket seats.
DID YOU KNOW?
It's not the children this time It's Judge Irving
Cypen's wife, Hazel, who was in bed with the
measles. It's hard to have the measles when you
are no longer interested in coloring books or cut-
ting out paper dolls or using magic foam. At least
Hazel got a good rest. .
Marilyn Mailer's freezer eloor opened, and out
popped a frozen roast riglu e>n her toe. Marilyn
ih isn't mind the splint. She only feels that it WBS
unfortunate that it was a rolled roast that fell out.
A -anding rib roast would have been much more
glamorous.
-.* v
THE KINSMEN
A small group within the Pallot clan, consisting
of Mrs. Louis Pallot. sisters, nieces, daughters-in-
law and daughter. Barbara (Mrs. Howard) Katzen.
call themselves "The Kinsmen." Barbara and the
Glorias, one belonging to Honalel Pallot and the
Other I;: Norton Pallot. gave a surprise Bon
Voyage luncheon at the Crystal House for Mrs
Pallot, who is uoing around the world w:,h her
husband. Louis, winding up in Israel, where K.
Albert Pallot will be installed as first vice presi
dint at the international convention of B'r.ai
B'rith. H nej and Al will accompany the Louis
Pallets on i.heir trip. Globe- and airplanes deco-
rated tile luncheon table The' girls put on a gay
-kit showing what the traveler would bu\ in each
try. It's lucky that -he isn't influenced eas
ily. A nests were Mrs Morn- Cantor, Mis.
Samuel Soloway, Mrs. Frederick Scher, Mr- '
ej'h Perlman ami Mi'- Raj Shouger
! l; VN'CES LEHMAN
Jewish Teacher
Shortage Viewed
The acute shortage ol qualified
educational personnel was the sub-
ject oi discussion .1' the meeting
oi the Teacher Placement commit-
tee of the Bureau ol Jew i-h Bdu-
i a ion held Monday.
Needed for the coming year are
teachers lor Hebrew departments,
and particularly for >ne-ila\-a week
departments of man) 01 the Jewish
sehools.
The Bureau is sending out an
emergency call to all Jewish
teachers and to the Hillel Foun-
dation at the University of Miami
to recommend qualified candi-
dates.
The Bureau is now pi-jparing its
annual Teacher Registry listing
qualified teachers for placement in
the Jewish schools of Greater Mi-
ami. The Registry of Hebrew, Sun
!aj. and pre-school Jewish teach-
ers will be sent to all Jewish
sehools seeking personneL
The registry also urges that all
placement of eelucational i>ersonnel
in all schools come through the
central placement service if the
Bureau, so that teachers may be
properly screened and central fo-
cus given to all teacher recruit-
ment c-car Mamber is chairman
oi the Teacher Placement Commit
tie oi the Bureau Other nembers
include Rabbi Shimon Azulay. Mrs
Joshua Shtadlan, Mrs 1. 0 i> Bran
deis, Dr, Isaac Unterman, and Lou-
is Schwartzman, executive director
"I the Bureau
Runners-up were Jeff Farber,
David Galbut, Barry Miller and
Eli Mizrahi. Each contestant
spoke on the subject, "Optimism
Spirit of Youth."
Sidney Pertnoj will represent
Zl tie I". ..t the Florida or,,torn-.'!
contest being held in conjunction
with the Optimist state convention
\^ nter Park. From there, the
-tate winni r oei to the interna-
tional convention .it New Orleans.
Scholarships are awarded to the
finalists
The contest was 1 l this
year DJ [.I G
together with Zone Chairman 1. uia
i le Judges w re Judge Jason
Hi rkman, Judge Fred Barad and
Dr. Leon Dodez. All contestants
received trophies in recognition of
their participation.
MISS BARBARA CYPtN
Temple Israel
Forum Closes
Emily Kimbrough, one ot the
most popular personalities of the
lecture circuit, brought to a close
the 1964-65 Town Hall Forttm of
Temple Israel of Greater Miami
on Tuesday evening. Her subject
was "Listen While You Look."
The Community House Gallery
ef Temple Israel also opened a new
exhibition of graphics, featuring
the work- I f Naltali Bezein. Israeli
artist, supplemented by American
Jewish artists Baskin. Soyer. Mar-
gulies. Amen, and Broner.
Mr. and Mrs. Myron M. Behr
man. ee>chairmen of the Temple
Israel Forum, have announieel that
John K. Galhraith. Norman Cous-
ype*. schwori
EngagemenHj
Mr .,ini \irs ,. I
2375swthS.S2A
Liwam "> ot- kt
'/,llri:" '"HI the lat nA
want
studen' 'he i-IV *?]
"here ,, rccejv(i
Freshman Award forsasl
~\h i'liwtnia
also n member of M.T
Delta Honor Sorieh iJ
'- "' attendiag the'oT
Pennsylvania, studvin,
gieni -, 84
Mr SchwarU, also a 1
School ar.s
l nivcrs tj ,1 Florida
- Ot Pi [Jl
Fraten |\ and P: Mj Pnj*
' iety He will 1
ft (in the University ol
Juni and mter 1 I
uate I
x ". dati j
Israeli Costume Nig
Israeli costume!
'd Ih' v' "I' V ;-; JjuJ
lion i at israet]
Night on Saturday, : j
B h Mnshe ConptgaWj
Moshe isal 13530 \v Dixie bJ
M
ins, Dr Henry Kit j
ip Bur on have
nexl year's series.
MORRIS & RUTH IERNER
HARRY ZUCKERMAN

MIAMI'S NEWEST CHINESE RESTAURANT
!The (Zkina JMaiJ
SERVING AUTHENTIC CHINESE FOOD!
340 Bird (S.W. 40th St.) Ph. 226-0331
bi piete DINNERS from $1.25
Also Have A Complete Take-Out Mi
10 P.M. SUNDAY 1 lo 9 P.M. (Closed Tuesdoy)
AIR-CONDITIONED
gogue, Gary Steven Winston, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Winston.
188 Shore Drive South, will be Bar
Mitzvah.
Gary' is a seventh grade student
at Shenandoah Junior High, where
he plays clarinet in the school band.
lie attends Beth David Religious
School. Gary also plays the piano,
organ and saxophone. Other inter-
ests include baseball and basket-
ball.
His father is a judge on the Mi-
ami Beach Boxing Commission and
a former president of the Miami
YMII.V
Mr. ami Mi>. Winston are tender-
ing the congregational Kiddush fol-
lowing servici s in honor of Gary.
In the evening, the} will host a
formal Bar Mitzvah dinner in Spec-
tir Hall at Beth David
Gary's grandmother, Mrs. Fan
nie Weinstein, ol Brooklyn, will at-
tend the celc bration
Steven Kipnis
I'.,; Mitzvah Ol Steven, sou of Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Kipnis. will I
sen ed oh Saturday, May 1. at Tem-
ple Emanu-EI.
Steven, is a seventh grade stu-
rent at Nautilus Junior High. In-
terested in sports, he won an award
in the United Slates national sum-
mer camp rillery contest for chil
dren under 1-4 years of age.
Grandparents, Mr. and Mrs lrv-
ing Kipnis and Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Schechter, will be among those at-
tending Steven's Bar Mit/.vah.
The celebrant will be honored at
a Kiddush in Sirkin Hall following
the ceremony, and at a reception
Saturday evening at the Seville
Hotel.
* t
Jack Goldstein
Jack Ronald Goldstein will be
Bar Mitzvah on Saturday morning.
\tn> 1. at Temple Beth Am.
A seventh grade student at Pal
me; to Junior High. Jack is active
in the school sports program and
plays alto saxephone in the band.
Mr. and Mis. Harold Goldstein.
11U40 SW 61st Ct., will honor then
son at a luncheon reception follow-
ing the service.
Victor Lasoff
On Saturday. May 1. Victor Las-
ill will he Bar Mitzvah during aft
erhoon services at the Israelite
Center.
\ seventh grade honor student a:
Shenanddah Junior High, Victor
also attends Israelite Center Relig
H us School, "her.' he i> a member
,,: the Junior Youth Croup
Sun ol Mr- Ruth Lasoff and
i.ii:il-on ,-i Mr id Mrs Charles
fti* th
Warren Jtckman Michael Burk
Niedman. the celebrant will be
honored at the Shalosh Seudoth
following services.
* f. t-
Warren Jackman
Religious services at Temple Si-
nai on Saturday morning. May 1.
will include the Bar Mitzvah of
Warren, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Jackman.
Warren is an eighth grade stu-
dent at Jchn F. Kennedy Junior
High, attends Temple Sinai Relig-
ious School, and is interested in
all sports
.
Janet Bush
Bas Mitzvah of Janet Uene.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Bush,
5165 v\\ 5th si will he observed
during Friday evening services,
Apr 30, at Flagler-Granada Jewish
I 'enter.
Janet is a .--eventli made honor
student at Kin loch Park Junior
High and has attended Plagler-
Granada Religious School for eight
year.-. Her hobbies include art. mu-
sic and sports
'Hie celebranl will be honored ;it
a Kiddush following services.
Grandparents, Mrs. Minnie Kap-
lan. Miami Beach, and Mrs Celia
Bush, New York, will be among
Jantl Bush
Sttven Kipnis
100

TO THE STATE Of ISRAEL ON US >7*h ANNIVERSARY
DADE CAFETERIA
(ring "LUNCHEONS" ior Business Men and Women
>*> from Columbus Hotel at 111 N.E. Third Avenue
We Salute the State of Israel
Bonfire Restaurant
jlCKORY ROASTED FOOD OVER OPEN BON-FIRE
KING
ARTHUR'S
COURT
STROLLING VIOLINS
DINNER SUPPER
MIAMI
SPRINGS
VILLAS
500 Deer Run TU 8-4521
ART BRUNS, Co-Owner
those attending the celebration.
In the recent essay and art con-
test sponsored by the Bureau of
Jewish Education. Janet won hon-
orable mention for her sculpture
ot Chaim Wei/mann.
- <
Gary Heiken
On Saturday morning. >ray 1. at
Temple Zion. Gary, son of Dr. and
Mrs. Murray Heiken. 6017 SW 13tll
Terr., will be Bar Mitzvah.
Gary is a seventh grade Student
at West Miami Junior High and
plays the trumpet in the school
b;*nd lie is also interested in coin-
collecting.
Mr. anil Mrs. Louis Heiken are
visiting here from New York City
to help celebrate the event
Barbara Golden
Barbara, daughter ol Mr. and
Mis. Stanley Golden, lTiitu NE 3rd
Ave., will be Has Mitzvah during
Friday evening servici -. Apr 30, .*r
Temple Adath Yeshurun.
An hour, student in the seventh
grade al -i< in i Kennedy Junior
lii'-ii. Barbara will represent her
school in the Count) tp-lim^ Bee
competition.
A Ki Idt -li reception will follow
-i rvices
NOW!
FAVORED DISHES
OF FAMOUS
AMERICAN RESTAURANTS
Included this coming week are Chateaubriand of New
York, Scandia of California, Jacques of Chicago, and
other equally popular and noted dining spots. Each
evening of the week you may enjoy a different
gourmet menu featuring the foods of these restaurants
who have entrusted to us their priceless recipes.
THE BAYVIEW ROOM
DUPONT PLAZA HOTEL
Also a l.i carre menu
Service 6 ro I I p.m.
ner dancing, except Monday.
Reservations Frank. 370 8861
DANCING FROM 10 p.m. Hal Rader Orch.
Luis Maya, Strolling Guitar, From 6 to 9
Robin Hood
biscayne Blvd. at N.E. J6th St.
OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH AND DINNER
< Thru S.ii. 11:30 .i m. to 2 a.m.
Sundiy from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.
COCKTA LS From SSc 4 to 6
Hul & Cold Ht.s D'otuv.
Reservations 371-2621

ge 14-B
PJmUi) fhoridH^r
Friday. April
Leaders of '.he Miami Housinq Authority and
Jewish Home for the Aged inspect Robert Kinq
High Towers, opposite the Oranqe Bowl, the
ewest project for the low income elderlv con-
ducted by the Authority. Left to right are Ha-
ey Sofge, executive director of 'he Authority;
Zavid B. Fleeman, vice president and Build-
ing Committee of the Home; Martin Fine, chair-
man of the Authority and member of the
Home s board; Judge Irving Cypen, president,
and Maurice Pearlstein, executive director, of
the Home. The Miami Housinq Authority has
received national acclaim for its housinq
projects for the elderly.
Aged Home and Miami Housing Authority
Consider Housing Needs for Elderly Here
\l a special call of Judge In
_ Cypen, president of the Jewish
): Mm- for the Aged, tlu' Hoard of
1 rector of the H me met Sunday
the R bert King Hish Towers
recentlj completed by the Miami
i .usiiiL.' Authority for the low in
come elderly.
This was the first time in its !
r -ton that the board held one
its meetings away from Douglas ;
rdens.
Purpose of the meeting was to
Hear presentations by Martin
Fine, chairman, and Haley Sofge,
executive director of the Miami ,'
Housing Authority, on the work i
:f the Authority, the housing
reeds of the elderly in Greater
Miami, and the potential role of
ne Home in helping to meet the |
remand for good, low cost hous-
g for senior citizens.
'ine and Sofge told the group
al High 'I o u e r s is the fifth (
ising project for the eld i j
i mplet< (I bj the Authority. All five
hdve u total ol 795 units. Including
efficien ies, one and two-bedroom!
. artments. Only those elderlj [
.th a maximum annual income of i
S..8CH) are eligible, and the rental I
i 53o per month. "There is a wait '
list of over 1.500. which is;
.rowing rapidly, and the Authority
o. nnot possibly meet their needs
decent, low rental housing,"
Fine and s:ofge reported.
They explained t.hat "these pub
lie housing projects are for thi !
well-aged, who are seeking to main-
lain independent living arrange-
.nents, Good, low rental housing
plus a variety of group work pro-
grams." they stressed. "helps
maintain the dignity and self-re-
spect of the elderly and the pre-
vention of deterioration and break-
lown necessitating instftutionaliza-
lion."
Fine, who Is also a member of the
Homo's board, pointed out that "the
develo] ment o( good housing fi r
.he elderly and other non-institu-
,ional services are prime factors in
the decrease of applications of the
well-aged for admission to homos
for the aged, and as a result these
homes throughout the nation are
becoming primarily ^killed care
nursing facilities for the sick
ged."
i' i j p o n reported to the
.illy i.'i year- ago,
he ll' me h. s aware "i these n m
".-Utiilion.il trends and planned
'or the eventual development ii
Douglas Gardens ;i- a skilled care
nursing facility" and that "the
Home had just received su.h Ii
censure for all of the 221 beds at
IS Gardens by the Florida
>epartment of Health "
Sofge and Fine urged "that the
Home consider the development
of a high-rise for low and mid-
dle-income elderly and engage
in some pioneering cooperative
projects with the Miami Hous-
ing Authority."
Judge Cypen noted that "the
Miami Housing Authority has re-
ceived national acclaim for its
work in the area for housing for
the elderly." Other leaders of the
Home, including Baron de Hirsch
Mover. David Fleiman. Louis Bres-
kr and Jack Popick. said that "the
impact of the meeting on the Board
of Director* augurs well for the
Home's entrance into the field of
low cost housing for the aged."
Another hig'h point of the meeting
was the presentation of a Beautifi-
cation Award of the City of Miami
:n the Home by Miami Vice Mayor
Alice Wainwrmht. The award was
presented to the Home through Mr
and Mrs Sam Resnick "who. by
their creativity and zeal during the
:>:;st five years, have transformed
Douglas Gardens into one of the
Hole 1 beaut) spnts 1.1 Greater Mi-
ami
Judge Harold p, Spaet chairman
'I the Homo Admission Commit
ti e, presented a rep rt on the
11: me'.- service statistics in 1964
' In 1964." he said, -the Home
admitted 84 residents Since the
completion of the Abun Memorial
expansion late in 1963, .1 total <>i
150 residents had been admitted
I :>e occupancy rate in 1964 was 98
percent The largest proportion oi
residents was In the 75 to 7!i age
group, with 94 residents over BO
yean Ol age. The ratio of women
to men was 2.5 to 1 The total num-
ber of inquiries regarding admis-
sion to the Home in 1964 was 598."
Irvinq Pietrack and his or-
chestra have been chosen to
perform at the third annual
convention dinner of the Flor-
ida State Council for Senior
Citizens on Saturday eveninq
at the Everglades Hotel. Fea-
tured with the orchestra will
be Adele Stone, soprano, and
Joseph Malek, tenor.
Chief Headley
Feted at Tribute
In Dinner Key
Miami 1'olnc (hot Walter Head
'.ey was honored at a tribute dinnei
S.turday night al Dinner Key Au
litorium.
The tribute marked Headley's 17
/ears of service as a law en-
ro:cement officer here fleadlej
was name I chief on Aug 11. 1948.
Headley was bom in Philadel-
phia on May 11, 10S. In 1923, his
family moved to Florida. In Feb-
ruary, 1937, he joined the then
120-man Miami Police Force.
Headley made detective in 1940.
Following duty with the FBI. he
returnul to the Police Department
as administrative assistant to the
chief of detectives in 1943. He at-
tended the School for Police Ad-
ministration at Northwestern Uni-
versity. I'pon graduation, he was
named Miami's first director of po-
lice training.
Prior to his appointment as ohief.
he established Miami's first police
academy.
Organ Recital Sunday
A concert to the public at no
charge will be given Maj > at th.'
Victor Recital Hall. \\V 54th St
and 3rd Ave., by nationally known
organist Don Kingston, of the
Conn Organ Co, Tune is 4 (mi The
Hall, sponsored by the Victor Piano
and Organ Co.. will offer a series
oi concerts overj week on Sundays
throughout the summer ST
AEPhi Alumnae
Install Officers
Alpha Fpsilon Phi Alumnae \-
sociation (f Greater Miami held in-
stallation ceremonies at the Wa
terways Restaurant in Coral Gables
on Apr. 27
Mrs Howard Katzen, president of
the Alumnae Association for the
past two years, installed Mrs. Rob-
ert Werner as president for the
coming yar; Mrs. Morris Futer-
nick, vice president; and Mrs. Al-
bert Morrison, recording secretary
Mrs. Charles Krugiick, correspond
iing secretary; Mrs. Fred Ober.
treasurer.
Members at-large for the new
term are Mrs. Roy Weissei and
Mrs. Richard Helfman.
Sharon Leopold
Wins Second
!n Bible Quiz
Sharon, daughter ol Mr and Mrs.
Max Leopold, of 17400 NE 13th Ave .
N Miami Beach, and a student at
the Beth Torah Religious .School,
/on second place in the Southeast-
ern Regional Bible Contest held at
he Bureau of Jewish Education re-
cently.
Sharon, who participated in the
',il le Study Group at Belli Torah
(" ducted by Alexander Andron.
acuity member, will compete in
he national finals to be held in
\ou York City on Sunday.
She has been on the Honor Roll at
lohn F. Kennedy Junior High.
od was a recipient ot an award
,11m the Science- Foundation
The Bible Quiz, now in its fifth
ear, del I throughout tl e United
ttates, with the first prize a trip
1 Israel, Sharon will be the sec
nd to r< present Beth Tor
li 11.01 nail)
Jonathan Sriamrus represented
the si bind in the first annual Bible
Contest
Sharon complete l five years ol
Hebrew study at Beth Torah and is
a member ol Bmanuel Feder's pro
confirmation cl 1--
James Beard
Receives Top
Swiss Award
The Switzerland Cheese Associa-
tion has presented its award of
N nor. tin- -olden Arbah'te. to
James Board, distinguished gour-
met The Arbalete, or crossbow
- become the Swiss symbol for
freedom, independence and
.( h evi ment, and has also conn- to
en.! n: e the idea o| qualit)
Read James Hoard's recent hook.
''Delights and Prejudices," and
you gain an insight into the man
everyone knows as one of the na-
ti n's host known and most ad
mired gourmets articulate, with
very definite opinions about food
and wines and their preparation
and sen ice.
James \u aid m a kes the word
"gourmet" come to life. Whenever
he has traveled, he has brought to
his teaching a vitality he comniuni
cates to those who would learn tin-
art 01 preparing good food perfect
l>
To many people, the word "gour-
met" conjures up visions of ether-
eal dishes too difficult for mortal
man. or woman, to attempt. But
not after talking with James
Heard he delights in foods in
their natural state, fresh seafood,
excellent cheeses enjoyed out of
hand, a beauttfutty-cooked tender
li.tle chicken
Hi in/ Hofer. manager of the
Switzerland Cheese Association.
made the presentation "as a token
ot appreciation and thanks for his
outstanding services in the vast
field of fine food and its culinary
perfection." ST.
Mayor Snyder,
Greene Reelected
Mayor Arthur Snyder was re-
elected to his post by North Miami
Beachites in ballotting on Tuesday.
Snyder beat Dan Diefenbach by
3,037 to Diefenbach's 2,750.
Harold Greene won a full two-
year term over Stanley Falke by
2.981 to 2.557 to be returned to the
City Council.
Orthodox Youth
Map Convention
National Conference of Syna-
gogue Youth will hold its annual
Southern Region convention this
weekend at the Waldman Hotel.
The Apr. 30 to May 2 function
will feature the following program;
Registration on Friday. 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Executive meeting and resolu-
tions. Friday, 3 p.m.
Keynote address Friday at 9
p.m.
Banquet on Saturday. 9 p.m
Miami Beach Mayor Melvin Rich-
ard will speak and read a letter of
greeting from Gov. Burns
Flections and resolutions Sun-
di y. 11 a.m.
Study leading to the be
cation end develop^
the .
unci' ediotski
cordina to N
pot:
Improvement C
mittee. G ":hiiM|
president of the Interim
can National Bank, and,
also been elected to L
board of the Chomberj
Commerce. Next r.seaJ
the Improvement Conn
is scheduled for next 'm
nesday at Inter American |
tional Bank on Sunnv 1
Blvd.
Judea Students
To Take Part
In Fri. Service
On Friday evening, dm]
p.m. sen it 1 at Tempi*
fifth year Hebrew class
will graduate and partictpi
family worship services
Fern, daughter of Mr.
Sidney Deiitsch, will do thee
l>h ->,!_ Charles, son of I
Mrs Jerome Modell. and Mi
of Mr and Mrs Melvin!
v ill conduct the seme*.
Stuarl -"ii of Mr and Mrs 1
uel Serkin. will deliver the J
mon I ii iik son oi Mr mil
utsch. will chatj
Kidd I Mr ail
Meyci \ Baskin, nil! otoj
'inn
Palmer /
Memorials
"Miami 0/y
It "hi
Atonumcvf
Mum 1
SERVICt, (Mffl
AND MMW
Scheduled Ub**S
SUNDAY, MAY 2, I*
Mt. Nebo Cf'"r
DR. MURRAY M.RECK50*'"|
'..
Alt. Sinai &*>
CHARIES BRAWMTM'"M
v....
Sff what m 0
00 NOT BUY FROM*
ORDER FIRMS AND'
SORRY'
Buy Direct from^
facturerinMioK"*
save ma1**"
PALME"'5-
mm ******
Jnvlsfc Mw'' '
3279 S.W. 8* J
P44m**8***

rael Marks 17th Anniversary May 6
Jewish Flor idiari
Florida. Friday. April 30. 1965
Section C
if r
Isrcc-i Water Carrier will brinq water from
a ol Galilee to the parched Neqsv. The
Ice-like artery, which meanders down a
[th o: ISO miles of country, carries 250 mil-
cubic me'3rs of water annually. Israel
has built thiL National Water Carrier in full
Txord v.'ith the Unified Water Plan drawn up
for the reqion in 1955 by the late Ambassa-
dor E:ic Johnston of the United States, then
Presiden' Eisenhower's special representative.
HE ROSE TO THE HEIGHTS FROM THE RANKS
evi Eshkol: Man Behind
is Country's Development
Im l-Mikul was born Levi
ilnik in Oratoro, in the Kiev
fi>t l R issia. on Oct. 25.
lit' n e-c wd a traditional ed-
|ii n and later continued his
in Vilna. an Important
fr 11 z.i nist activity, wb re
nc I the Zionist Yout i Move-
It '.. here, too, that K.-h-
ABOUT THE MAN
>:> -W anniversary of in
1 tails mi the til 'i
ilu' Hebrew month
'I lu- year. :he date is
6
)n June 2t>. 196.1. Levi Esh-
k ofitcp as Prime Min-
nee then, his record
'vernenl has been
I j one success after
o'h : D,i the eve of the
' nivi rsary of the State
I'' Mr. F kcl can look
ese aei implis-h-
nong (.Hi, rs, during
I ng jear:
il mee ing with
1 Johnson and offl-
"'-' Ol the United States
"'nmcnl I r .some ten
Meetings with Fr e nrh
'"lent Charles de Gaulle
l!''it !) Piime M!nit er
1' I Wi' m.
I-Ma" li-bre .1 Ol d
relations wi h tbs We I
in-in Federal Re -ubtic.
ning o i commercial
>
11 Is-ael and the Euro
non Market.
ku'. met the late Yosef Sprinzak,
wh i h 'Ip.-il lay the IJTOUn Iwoi k
[or the young man's subsequent
decision to settle in Palestine.
Eshk 1 reached Jaffa at the be-
ginning cl 1914 and from '' n
went to Petach Tikva, where he
began work as an agricultural la-
borer. He was elected to the
Workers Committee in Petach
Tikva. and his first -economic"
job was manager of the workers'
kit hen in the village. Afterwards,
he was among the founders of the
"Avoda" group, which carried out
agricultural work on a contrac-
tual basis, and as a m< mher of
tin-, gr ii'p he worked on the lands
if Atai t and Kiryat Anavim
two set.I ments ne< Jerusalem.
Mets Bcn-Gurion
li was during World War I that
he became a member of the
Young Worker movement, which
later I cam. a part of Mapai. the
Israel Labor Party. He also join-
ed the Jewish Lesion, where he
met David Ben C.urion lor the
first time. He served two yi a -
in tin 40th Battalion of the Royal
Fusiliers, together with Eliahu
G 1. nl) and Dos llos (pioneers
< r Haganah. the Jewis i defense
.-.nii/ati.-in. Yitzhak Ban Zvi
Ccntinued on Page 2-C
h.:
1 ;- this man of such dy
pmc purpose and diploma-
The b'ograpby I Levi
utcl htrewith presented
l|s Ihe story.
Celebration Highlights
Mounting Tensions In
Foreign Relations Ties
By HAIM YAHIL
The seventeenth year ot Israel's
i xistence. celebrated this year
May'6, was marked by great ten-
sion in ihe field t-l its foreign re-
lations. Ths hopes that many had
pinned the | revious year on the
thawing ol international tension
as a result of the Moscow Agree-
ment ol 1963 on the banning of
nuclear tests have so tar not ma-
tt rialized. Ten ion is. in tact,
rising in the various sensitive
pots in the world, especially in
Southeast Asia and in Congo.
The crisis in international rela-
tii ii- also tends to undermine the
au.hc.-ity of the United Nations.
Such developments on the inter-
i ional scone :an only increase
the concern about the situation in
the Middle Bast. For even when a
certain relaxation in WOl'ld il-
lations was imminent, doubts
were still gnawing at the heart
as to w h e t h e i such mitigation
would take place also in the Mid-
dle East. Nasser's dictatorial and
expansive regime in Egypt re-
mains today, as in years past, the
focus of unrest in the Middle Bast,
Balance of Power
II i> he who inflated tension in
the region to the extent of up
'etting the balance ol power and
oi threatening war. It is he who
has protracted the war in Yemen
for the third year now, and who is
preventing a settlement of the
dispute it is he who is the prin-
cipal factor in fanning unrest in
A d e n. as well as in the Arab
- ,u ikdoms, and in the Sudan. It is
he who is playing such a leading
role in fanning civil war both in
Cyp.'US and in the Congo. It is he
heads the political strife and
the preparations for a possible
militar] showdown against Israel.
Tine. Nisser do.; not want war
V ii.'i Israel s l long as he thinks
Israel is strong enough to bring
bin defeat.
But lather than choose the path
of abatement and of reducing
differences, he has embarked en
the road ol increased armaments.
and is instigating the other Arab
states to espouse a policy ol
wild adventure against Isiael. He
is also extrting unrestrained
pressure on other states to submit
to the boycott of Israel. The ser-
ii us eel nomic crisis under which
Egypt is laboring as a result ol
Nass r's militar) adventures in
Yemen, and ol his exaggerated
armaments policy, did not induce
Na.-iei to desist from his danger
ous machinations and to concen
tiate on restoring his country -., my and its development; ii
only succeeded in increasing
untrammelled aggi essiveness
National Water Carrier
In the past year. Israel c inplet
ed the Hi -t stage cl the Nal
Water Carrii r, tin lai gest devel
cpmont project in the history of
the country. The completion of
th'i enterprise is not only an ee
i.nomic and engineering feat of
ihe greatest magnitude, it is also
a political achievement ol pri
mary importance, sine- the Arab
States aim primarily against i-
i at Is de\ elopmenl a n d against
the expansion of her absorptive
capacity ol immigration in the
future. The Arab State-; could not
stop the implementation ol this
project, SO they have divided to
sabotage it by arbitrarily deflect-
ing the .Ionian tributaries in Syr-
ia and in the Lebanon.
One can not know with any
measure ol certaintj whether the
Arab States actually intend in-
vesting hundreds of millions of
dollars in a project that can bring
no benefit to themselves but only
harm the State of Israel. The Is-
rael Government, however, has
deemed itself called up in to make-
it clear to them and to the w hob-
world that it would regard anj
infringement ol its water rights
as an infringement of its iron
tiers and would take action ac
cordingly. 'Ihe state ol Israel will
not permit it. development to be
dependent on the good will, or the
animosity of her neighbors
Isiael is convinced that the sa-
fest guarantee for the preserva-
Continued on Page 13-C
VISION NOW A REALITY
National Water Works
Source of Great Pride
Israelis are apt to wax lyrical
when they gel onto the subject
it their rccently-completi d Na-
tional Water Carrier. They speak
i : ii is the "fulfillment of a
(beam ol many decades" and as
the realization cf the Biblical
prophecies about streams flowing
in the descri and the wilderness
being transf. med into a garden.
It is t!ie understandable rea.tion
of a people by long tradition wa-
ter-minded, surrounded an every
side by pi rters exhorting them
to "Save Water!"
Semi-Arid Country
For Israel, a long narrow strip
t f territory on the Eastern Medi-
terranean seaboard, is a semi-
arid country whose winter rain-
fall is fairly ample in the north
i-io Inches in an average year).
sparse lU the centre 18 inches1,
and dwindle to almost nothing iii
the south (I 1/4 inches.! Of it.
8,000 square miles, only about one
quarter is arable, being depend
cut on irrigation for sound culti-
vation.
The bulk ol thh potentially cul-
tivable land is in tht- arid S ut'n. a
h iar ular-shaped desert called
the Negev, which covers half of
the country, wide open spaces.
go id soil and r.J water -- that is
what Ihe Negev consists of. Fot
ye: s. Israel planners have been
[coking to this desert; and what
they saw in their mind's eye was a
granary. Now, something of that
vision is being made into a re-
ality.
What the planners sought to do,
and what they ac.uaUy accomp-
lished in June of la t year, was to
initiate a How ot surplus waters
In m the north to the dry south.
It -s in hilly Callilee that most ol
the country's waiter resources are
In be I und, their total annual
average being estimated at 1.5O0
Continued on Page 6-C
ISRAEL PRIME MINISTER LEVI ESHKOL
Suar 5 1948--196S J\4*u 6

Page 2-C
*Je*ist) rhrktktr
PRIME MINISTER LEVI ESHKOL CHATS WITH YOUTH OF KIBBUTZ DEGANIA BETH.
The Role of Levi Eshkol
Continued from Page 1-C
later President of Israeli and
o hers. After he left the army, he
and other members of his group
' a place where they could
settle on the lar.d. and he
among the founders of De-jania B.
a kibbutz near the southwestern
shores of the Sea of Galilee.
Eshkol participated in the
founding convention of the Hi-ta-
dru:. the General Federation of
Labor, in Haifa in 1921. and serv-
ed as a delegate to the 12th and
subsequent Zionist Congresses.
He handled Hi?tadrut affairs in
Vienna and Berlin, and in 1927
he went to Moscow, together win
the late David Remez. as a mem-
ber of the delegation to the Co-
operative Congress. He was also
a delegate to the Congress of the
Socialist International in Prague
At the end of the 1920s, he was
a member of the Agricultural Cen-
ter He was elected a member of
the Mapai Central Council and
served as party secretary and as
a member of the Central Commit-
tee.
In the early day- of Nazi rule.
ho ran the Settlement Department
of Palestine Office in Berlin and
also acted on behalf of the Hecha-
lutz pioneering organization in
Germany, Poland and Lithuania
organizing the transfer of immi-
grants and property from Ger-
many. In 1944. he was appointed
Secretary of the Tel Aviv Labor
Council.
Defense Problem*
Levi Eshkol devoted a consider-
able part of his time to security
problems. In various periods, he
was active on the high command
of the Haganah and served as Ha-
ganah treasurer for many years.
He also helped to obtain weapons
abroad. In 1947. David Ben-Gurion
called on him to take up a central
position on the Haganah staff,
and with the establishment of the
State, he was appointed director-
general of the Ministry of De-
fense.
.As a member of the Jewish Ag-
ency Executive, and as head of
its Agricultural Settlement De-
parttnent since 1949. Mr. Eshkol
has been re.-por.sible for the mass
VW1W'7 TIN QT1J #i/
ISRAEL AjRLJNES
1602 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach
Telephone 532-5441
M ttlement of the new immigrants
on the land. Between 1950 and
1952. he was also the treasurer of
the Jewish Agency. In 1951. he
was appointed Minister of Agri-
culture and Development, and a
year later he assumed the post
of Minister of Finance.
He has also served as chairman
of the Cabinet Economic Commit,
tee. As Minister of Finance, he
represented Israel at international
conferences and meetings of the
World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund, as well as in dis-
cussions with Eric Johnston,
President Eisenhower's special
envoy, on plans for the develop-
ment of water resources. He has
visited the United States a num-
ber of times, both on government
business and on behalf of the
United Jewish Appeal and the Is-
rael Bond drive.
New Economic Policy
In the past decade Mr. Eshkol
has been largely responsible for
development and economic policy
in Israel. He was among the arch-
itects of Israel's New Economic
Policy, hinged on the devaluation
of the Israel Pound in February,
1962. and included the institution
of liberalized export-import pol-
icies, In recent years, t>>. he wu
frequently called upon to si rv<
Prime Minister, in Mr
i lei i and as
r ".' n van is part
ion talks and
ins.
nation, In
Jura i| Mr Bent.'.
Prime Minister and Minister of
Defi-r -i Mr Bshki.! was appoint-
ed t.. these two posts on June 26.
1963.
On Mar. 3. 1964. Mr Eshkol
married Miriam Zelikovitch. sen-
ior librarian of the Knesset and
a long-time friend of the family
The Prime Minister has been mar
ried twice before and was widow-
ed since December. 1959. He has
four daughters.
Mr Eshkol speak* English Rus
Man and German, as well as He-
brew and Yiddish His book "Be'
hevlei Hitnahalut"'Problems of
Settlement" was published in
1959.
Newcomers
Tew of thousands of immigrants
have been arriving annually In
the 1. -1 ft w yearsthe total, a
quarter of a million. The li.-t of
countries in all parts of the globe
from which the immigrants came
runs into over 70. Frcm some,
many thousands arrived; from
others only a mere trickle.
Israel's Ties Abroad
Continue to Expa
Israel's links with the family ()
nations continued to expand, and
her tit < Of friendship and coopera-
tion were fustber strengthened
during the seventeenth year of
the State's existence. Eminent
statesmen from the four comers
Of the earth paid friendly visit-
and Israel's own leading figures
further cemented international
bonds by their missions abroad
There was no sign", however,
that the thaw in the Cold War had
reached the Middle East. Arab
summit conferences were dedi.
cated mainly to proje.ts to de-
prive Israel of her vital water
supplies and long-term planning
for the attempt to destroy her
when the time should be regard-
ed as ripe.
Premier Levi Eshkol's visit to
the United States at the invitation
of President Lyndon B. Johnson
the first official visit paid by an
Israeli Prime Minister to the Uni-
ted States, was a landmark in the
history of the excellent relations
that have existed between the
two countries since the establish-
ment of the State of Israel. The
trip, which lasted from May 31 to
June 11. was followed by an offi-
cial 12-day visit to France on June
::
and her French ^
Mrs-WeiroflTte
fwogn MaJ
1 Meir.
lland- Britain. Be
Luxembourg in Man*
'"" "- "l earlier^,
and Italy during j^
talk- with leading

Mr< Meir -as recenoii
audii
with Quoon Fabiola. hat
: rnase to the
place- in i-rael in
:"''- the em! of
Mrs Meir made a higtih
ful t eral ^
i after rer
the independence
rhi new Republic r>f
had -.a\k- with the
Kenya Mr JomoKen;
- '::hor of Se^.
President Azikwe of SmJ
Eban.
;ster. wa
i during an
Continued on Pio'<
fll
I
JjirthdctU \-Jrcctiny?
to the
State of Israel
0l Hi
17tit JjirtltJay
MAY ISRAEL PROSPER AND
DEVELOP CONTINUE TC
GROW IN THE SAME STRIDE
AS IN THE PAST .
WITH GOD'S HELP.
Jennie
Grossinger

Page 4
+ Jt-isr Fkridfor
Friday. April 30.
1965
Major Events During
Israel's 17th Anniversary
1964
Jan. 1 Major General Yitzhak Rabin lakes office as Chief of
Stafl of Israel Defence Forces in succession to Major Genera!
Zvi Tzur.
Jan 5 Pope Paul Vis pilgrimage to Christian Holy Sites in
Israel.
Jan. 20 Prime Minister Eshkol. in statement on Arab Summit
Conference, says that Israel will continue to carry out her Na-
tional Water Plan.
Jan. 28 Israel's reply to Mr Khruschev\ note issued, favoring
peaceful settlement of all disputes.
Feb. 2 Mrs. Golda Meir, the Foreign Minister leaves Israel for
first stage of European tour.
Feb. 9 Mr. Eshkol welcomes President Johnson s statement
on desalination cooperation.
Feb. 16 King Baudouin and Queen Pabiola arrive lor private
visit
Mar. 17 Rabl>i Yitzhak Nis.-im reelcctcd. and Rabbi Issar
Yehuda Unterman elected, as Chief Rabbis
Mar. 24 s S. Shalom. Zim I>rael Navigation Co flagship, ar-
es in Haifa
Apr. 5 President Grunitzky ol Togo, arrives en S1
Apr. 6 Governor ol Bank hi Israel explains plans for aid to
developing countries at G< neva Confer* nee
Apr. 16 Independence Day parade ta
May 4 Knessel unanimously condemns
I intistf in Egypt
May 21 Rubinstein Chair of Musicology
l'ni\ ersit
May 31 Mr Eshkol leaves for U.S b
June 4 Trade agreement between Israe
June 16 ational Trade Fair opens in Tel \
June 17 Rabbi M limon Memorial dedicated in Jerusal< m
June 28 Mr Eshkol leaves for visit to Frai
July 9 Ze' Jabotinskj reburied in Jerusalem
July 12 Fourth I estiva I of Music and Drama opei s in
Jei -..
July 14 Fifth Zimriyah Choir festival open- in Jerusalem
Aug. 11 Hebrew I niversity.llad.issah Dental School dedicated
in Jerusalem,
Aug. 12 Report of U.S.-Israel Desalting Team published
Aug. 24 First World Congress Ol Jewish Pharmacists opens
Aug. 31 Rabbinate deletes mention of Benei Israel commun-
ity from marriage directives.
Sept. 13 Cabinet exposes Arab threats at Alexandria Confer-
ence
Sept. 24 Australian wins Third International Bible Contest
Oct. 1 Canada Building dedicated at Technion.
Oct. 7 Agreement for sale of Russian property signed in Jem
salem
Oct. 9 Syrian fire on Israeli farmers east of Ha on on third
successive day.
Oct. 19 57th International Aeronautical Congress opens
-'leba
Bonn's inaction on
inaugurate d at He-
and I
in
Israel
Oct. 21
Oct. 29
Nov. 1
Nov. 2
Nov. 3
Nov. 4
Nov. 6
Nov. 13
Mrs. Meir starts African tour.
New town of Carmiel inaugurated.
Prime Minister of Iceland arrives on official visit
16th Chess Olympics open in Tel Aviv
Syrians open fire on Israeli tractor.
New Campus of Tel Aviv University dedicated
President Zalman Shazar celebrates 75th birthday.
Syrians shell Israeli villages in Dan area: Israeli air-
craft silence Syrian batteries.
Nov. 18 Deputy Premier protests against Sataute of Limita-
tions for Nazi crimes
Nov. 24 New Potash plant inaugurated at Sodom.
Nov. 29. Nahal outpost founded at Modi'in
Continued on Page 12-C
to the
STATE OF ISRAEL
- on itt
I / fit ^/4i 111 ive rsa r y
'One o* the Nation's
Oldest and Largest"
jDade Federal
(Savings and Loan Association of Miami
JOSEPH M UPTON, President
Border outpost established by the Israel Army
Pioneer Settlers Corps to bolster Israel's de-
fences along the open frontiers. Manv are
founded by the Jewish National Fund and
include MoAini, Greater Miami s
just across troni 'he historic Ar .,
rael, Urn ei Fuhmm.
Border On I posts for Defense
By HERBERT FREEDEN
The i uli'i in Israel is n
mere fact it
mentality Extending ovei
miles from north t<> south and
made conspicuous bj barbed wire
and arnin j signs, Das jer, B >i
der Ahead!'", it cuts through Je
liisalem and the whole country-
side from Metulla down t,> Eila h
Where the border runs through
Hie desert or wild, uninhabited
hill regions, it is most difficult to
control. Border villages close
these gaps, for an etficient border
defense is based on a closely-knit
population deeply rooted in its
soil.
A New Plan
Life is hard in isolated border
villages, and not everybody is
suited to bear the constant strain
of watch and work. Young people
have to come to the fore
In I'1":1 th< .hw.-'i V.t
Ft i"!. together wit
oject I set up
on somi the most ex-
lints the border
. ,! si element to be man-
ia 1 bj members ol the Si rial i Pi-
oneer Settlement Corps ol tin- 1--
rael Army i, which would m rk the
land and at the same time tighten
up the border till civilian farmers
could move in.
The first outpost went up in
1959, i pposite 'ie Syrian frontier
in the Korazim areaAlmagor
Some time later, two of the young
settlers were killed by Syrian sni-
pers: yet the settlement has taken
firm roof. Even today. Almegor
is, muih to the dislike of its set
tiers, in the headlinestime and
auain its traders are being shot
at when working the fields which
stretch down to Lake Kinnereth
Where now there i~ a highway,
is beet
i
gli ol ..
p< trilled i \
1,000 acres havi
ed." which th I of sw
ereign Israel .
heart 11 the ccunti
piactical ptirp. se> -ibl
Remnants from '
riod d v, n to the
of a synagogui.....
tury stand witness |
history of that ar i re oaee
-t .(l Korazim. a qster-cit> of the
neejhl orin^ (';. i : and tam-
ed lor its earlj r | a heat
Agriculture to Fore
Now. Alntagcr will tx known fw
Us early vines and lush ton I
whu h iva. h the arket uhor.
they are still ripe So "nnY-
Continued on Pag* 6-C
fannitj xinin 1 auTttS | 'VUUTi 1 ivuijn rpjpio I we Pub 1 AKTOf j xwttsl
la*
Jtycst VUishes Ivoni
WILLIAM BOKNSTIIN
Fo tlic
STATE OF ISRAEL
in \^Jb~crvancc / its
I /tit ^Arn n ive rsary

Friday. April 30, 1965
* knlsr tkrirfttr
Page 5-C
portrait of Israel's President Shazar
By MOSHE HURWITZ
ftebtc Prrsident Yitzhak Ben
bisucceedf i in creating the im-
L of the ideal President of Is-
S_a combination of stateliness
ith simplicity and popularity.
when i: became necessary Ij find
, successor to fill that lofty port-
uon which has created sash a
Hrnini('H [or itself in the hearts
^ the people one's eyes were
lurnerl to Zalman Shazar, who by
dint of his personal traits, his
nth and multifarioui past, his
wide learning and high spiritual
KUinmerifi SUo Ms greal serv-'
]cei to the ivement of national
;fUU! ?..: i I worthy ol oe
topying the uffice
Followers 11 Jewish tradition
and relign U-- I : in iples hold .Mr
Shuar in n u lation tor 'n- de p
ligious tradition.
Himsi ,i! rel'gii -
- drunk deeply .it
Jj i! i Icarmng
iver all it* a mil i ions ( loselj
the traditional
ile, he is a close
Itebbe of Luba
the stalwarts of
. c camp see
ne oi the first
Jew ish Labor
who laid i s
.. n (l oi ganizational
Mi sp ikesman
oi Jcwis Si lism at Interna-
lorums
Man of Peace
The liberal camp and the fight-
ers ii.l for Jewish
and human indcpcndi n:e look up-
m him as a torch-bearer of the
ol br therly love and peace.
For Shazar is a man who has been
able tn bridsi differences and to
bring tin mi age of hope, crea
an i upbuilding to his
lere.
has a rich n a rd
i Vishu\. as one
i dreamers and
he participated,
late President
'.'\ id Ben-Gurion, in
i gat< tile sit.
1 .. 'v for Jewish
'""''' eountrj At in
bor conferences,
I the I ..ii!,- of the
litj in Pah nine
lu implant in the
adi ;- and ales-
e ol the claims of
. for an inde-
its own homeland
in 1947, Shazar
'In Histadrut Gcn-
1 of Jewish Labor.
the establishment
- ite in Palestine. In
IW8. ftjiar formulated he
8,1 I Jewish In depend-
;'"' which was passed by the
""' General Council at its ses
non In Tel Aviv
GREETINGS TO THE
STATE OF ISRAEL
on its
ANNIVERSARY
MR. AND MRS.
A- I. USLANDER
Zalman Shazar in conversation
of the Labor Zionist Movement,
gress at Lucerne. Switzerland, in
ACHIEVEMENT*
Zalman s.. ,/;u was el rted
thiid President of the State
dt Israel on May 21. 1963. sue-
ng he late Ita
Zvi, l died the month !>.-
f< re
Mr Shazar < ime to Israel
in i.r'i A n ol wide inter
psts and a i real tori ii
ledge, as wi II as a per-
tasivc a n d a < ; he I
spi ak< r, Mr Sh 12 ir has b: n
scnl 1 n umer us mis ns
id m various :ap i<
, i 1 'vis w tti n exte: si' elj
,.1 historical, political
littrarj ibjects
Ti [ether wi.h 1 rmei P
Minister David Ben-Gurion,
he n presented h! eountrj at
the funeral "i the late Sir
Winston 1 liun hill of Great
E itain la-t winter
-As a number of the Politiral
Committee set up by the Zionist
General Council, Zalman Shazer
particrpati l in all the stage oi
the Jewlrh strua de al the I'N f< r
the decision to establish a Jewish
state When the State emci ed
he was appointed lo a cabinet
p.
men As Minister of E lucal or
and Culture, he intro luce 1 the
I ulsory Education l iw ii the
Knesset, and after piloting it
all its readings, he im
plemented that law in In i an
with Berl Katzelnelson. leader
during the 19th Zionist Con-
193S.
BIRTHDAY GREETINGS
tc the
STATE OF ISRAEL
on its
17th ANNIVERSARY
ProL and Mrs, Berlhold Frit
Za'man Shazar as a student
in St. Pe'-nsbuiq. Russia, in
1910.
With all his being a sun 11 the
trj Ccn pulsory education is a
crsti ne In ilv work cf inte-
gration of the mam and various
Htm ties i" Israel
Corcern for Diaspora
y 1Vi .; p|j rooted in Israel,
.,- ^ 1. th less l yal to
oora 1 v. rj \ one k iows the
i etter than he, and his
n i mcern h is been to save
lewish people in the Diaspora
::. m assimilation and d< genera-
in u II Zionist conventions in
it is he who repeatedly
.. ,, > ttent m 1 f 'he move-
.., th situ iti 1 in the Dias-
t ho an ilyzes Jew-
Unyions in the Golah and
warn* aeainsl the dang ts threat-
.., v i '1 existenci I! re
v ;, '1 nh r 1 : the Zionist Ex
1 the pi t 12 yi ars, Zal-
.1 ii in cemented close
s with the J< wish dispersions
1 h pi 1 mal vlii to many
ji wish communities Deeply .on.
cerned over the future of Jewish
life in the diaspora, his main ef-
forts are directed to Jew i-h edu-
cation, endeavoring to make it
Israel-oriented and to bind it
closely with the basic culture of
the .lew ish people. As head of the
Informal inn Department and la-
ter of the Department lor Educa-
tion and Culture in the Diaspora
of the Jewish Agency, he has con-
stantly warned against all threat-
ening dangers, calling for inces-
sant efforts by the Zionist move-
ment and the State in order to en.
sure the Jewishness of the young
generation in the Diaspora.
True tn his principles thai one
can not build a future for the
Jewish people in the Diaspora
without a basic knowledge ol
Jewi-li history, shazar is a pio-
neer in tho field ol Biblical and
Jewish historical research -
zar's historical researches have
shown thai the various Messianic
movements in Jewry were neces
sarj links in the effort at political
and national liberation, leading to
the emci gence of the s ate ol
Israel The lessons drawn by
Shazar frcm the Shabbetai Zvi
Movement serve as a guiding
light also to the present genera-
tion, namelj thai Jewish strength
lies within ourselves and tl
long as internal enemies do no:
destroy our own roots, we ha\ e
nothing to fear from extern) I
foes
Identifies With Masses
Shazar cculd easily have made
a great career for himself in th
field of learning and research,
but he chose to devote his ener-
gies to the interests of the movi
ment. which has succeeded In
Changing the fate of the present
generation.
There is hardly any need t 1
point tii the natural trait of sin
pticity that is SO deeply ingrained
in Zalman Shazar. By his very or
igins, upbringing and contacts
with the Jewish masses during the
greater part of his life, that trail
in all it- grace and beauty has b<
come ingrained in him. Shazar
likes to be with the Jewish mil--
es, to -peak to them and to Inspire
them. As a faithful follower of
Habad Hassidism, winch is by m
ture a popular movement, and as
a student of Jewish I: lklore an I
o| Jewish life and customs, he
has deep rods in the simple str.
ta ol the Jewish people, and his
ear is always attuned to the sor
rows and troubles of men and
women who come to pour their
hearts out to him. His offices in
Continued on Page 6-C
naratulations
/o the
STATE OF ISRAEL
I 7tn ->''rimVer$ary
(liarlcs (lianowskv
anplinicnt;
TROPICAL PARK
INC
SAUL SILBERMAN
President

Page 6-C
*Jen l*t Her Mian
Friday, April 30.
1961
Border Outposts Built for Defense
Within the netwe
Continued from Pag 4-C
the
sea
warmth and water make
heavy soil which is beneath
level yield abundant crops.
The second border outpost was
established in th\> hills of Irron.
guarding one of the oldest thor-
oughfares which connects t "no
Emek Jesreel with the coastai
plain. The Roman legions passed
through it. Napoleon's army in
1799. and the British troops in
1918 under Gen. Allenby when
they conquered Palestine. I n
1962. the construction of an access
road to the tcp of the eastern hill
range was begun, which closely
hugs the border at a length of
seven miles. As soon as the way
was open for the large bulldozers
and rooters, reclamation work
started on some of the 2.000 acres
earmarked lor the first Jewish
settlement of the regionMeAmi.
The name has a double connota-
tion: literally, it means "Waters
of my People.'' pointing to the
element so essential for life in
this country in general, and for
farming in particular. But it also
recalls Miami. Fla.. where JNF
supporters have undertaken to
raise S5 million for the Irron reg-
ion development.
Yet another mountain was con-
quered in the same wayGilboa.
David, the Psalmist, cursed Mt.
Gilboa after the tragic outcome
of the battle against the Philis-
tines when King Saul and his son,
Jonathan, were slaughtered. "No
dew and no rain upon you Mt.
Gilboa." he exclaimed. Since
then, many battles have been
fought on the mountain which
controls the strategic road from
north to south, where foreign
armies marched at all epochs of
history.
Second Liberation
The last battle there was fought
in Israel's War of Liberation.
Mt. Gilboa represented the most
advanced position of the Arab
Legion which held its sway over
National Water Carrier Project
President Shazar
pears today.
as he ap-
President
Continued from Page 5-C
the Jewish Agency building are
always besel b> Hassidim, mem-
bers ni the old Yishuv and new
immigrants t<> all of whom he
lends an attentive ear and ex-
ti nds a helping hand.
In accordance witft the laws of
Israel, Zalman Shazar was elect-
ed by the Knesset, but there can
be no doubt that he has been the
eh ice of the whole people. Even
those members of the Knesset
who did not vote lor him with-
held their support out of political
party considerations and not be-
cause they bad anything against
his personality.
Continued from Page 1-C
million cubic meters. Seventy per.
cent of this was already exploit-
ed before the giant new south-
bound conduit to the Ncgev was
built, and now. with its opera-
tion, much of the remaining 30
percent is being utilized.
Yet. even with this additional
amount, there is sufficient water
to Irrigate only about -to percent
of the country's potentially ara-
ble land, it will thus be under-
stood why Israel Is casting about
for other, less conventional means
of bolstering its water supply, ex-
periments in sea water conversion
being i ne of it- major preoccu-
pations.
Water t" the Negev is being
pumped from Lake Kinneret. a
natural reservoir entirely within
Israel territory and the only sub-
stantial water resource still avail-
able for exploitation.
It has been overcome by mean-
ni two giant pumping stations aug-
mented by smaller booster sta-
tions which lift the water into and
along the conduit From the point
of intake at Eshed Kinrot on the
Lake Kinneret shore, to the oper-
ational reservoir at Beil L'etufa in
Lower Galilee, a distance of more
than twenty miles, the water
flows in an open canal which
winds along the contours of the
rocky hills.
Constructive Venture
It crosses two deep canyons and
traverses three ridges through
which tunnels have been pierced.
to a combined length ol six miles.
The water then enters an under-
ground pipeline of 108 inch-diam-
eter, mostly along the coast, all
the way to the northern Negev.
This snake-like artery meanders
down the length of the country
Best Wishes to the
STATE OF ISRAEL
on its
17th ANNIVERSARY

Carl Weinkle
WEINKLES
STORES
Leo A. Chaikin
LIQUOR
INC.
24 STORES IN DADE AND BROWARD COUNTIES
L. & G. GLASS AND MIRROR WORKS
136 S.W. 8th STREET Phone FR 1-1363
\\l. INSTALL GLASS
on iviitv pi upon*::
STORE FRONT PLATE AND WINDOW GLASS
furniture Tops, Beveled Mirrors and Resilvering Our Specially
for 150 miles, crossing and inter
connectinn along i'.s way all re-
gional s> stems, thus making cen-
tral coordination and distribution
possible. Not all the 350 million
cubic meters of water which are
to be annually pumped south-
wards from Lake Kinneret rep
resent a net increment in water
availability. A certain amount has
to be employed to replenish re-
sources now in use which, because
of over-pumping and successive
years of drought, have been seri-
ously depleted, particularly in the
central districts.
The Israel National Water Car
rier. as the project has come to
be called, is by any standard, an
impressive development enter-
prise, and particularly for a coun-
trv a- new and as small as Israel,
which has a population ol barely
2,500,000, Israel has pointed out
time and again that it is a purely
constructive venture which in no
way infringes on the water rights
and need.- oi .my neighboring
Arab country
Indeed. Israel has built its Na-
tional Water Carrier in full ac-
cord with the Unified Water Plan
drawn up for the whole region in
1955 by President Eisenhower
special representative, the late
Ambassador Eric Johnston, a
a plan accepted on the technical
level by experts of all the Arab
States concerned with the .Ionian
River water system The llashe-
nnte Kingdom of Jordan is pursu-
ing its own national water scheme
based on that plan the diver-
sion of the River Yannuk, the
Jordan's major tributary' whose
flow is almost equal to that of the
main river.
the roads connecting the flourish
ing villages in the valleys. Ten
boys fell in the fierce struggle,
but most of the mountain remain-
ed in Israel's bands. In 1963, the
JNF hberated the mountain a sec-
ond time from the curse of deso-
lation. A road was carved out of
its rocky slopes and 2.5 million
trees have since been planted.
When at test a settlement was
established. Maaleh Hagilboa. Mr.
David Ben-Gurion. then Prime
Minister, sent a message to the
dedication ceremony paraphras-
ing King David's lamentation:
"Tell it in Gath and let it be
known in the streets of Astikelon.
that Israel's youth have settled in
the Mountains of Gilboa; let your
sisters and your mothers triumph,
for the shield of the Mighty is not
cast away."
On the "Roof of Galilee," where
the Lebanese border makes a
sharp turn and the hills are steep
ami rocky, is the outpost of Bira-
nit. Here stood once a fortress of
the Hasmonean King Alexandei
Yanei In our days. too. this reg-
ion proved of strategic import-
anceit has been the site of the
battle for the liberation of Gali-
lee In Israel's War of Independ-
ence
Historical Sites
Biranit is the first settlement
to be set up within the Caliban
development program. According
to the plan, it is to become the
rural center for the entire region.
One thousand acres are to be re
claimed by the young soldier set-
tlers; approach roads are being
built, forests are befng planted
and even the ancient oak trees,
now degenerated Into low brush.
are being restored to their orig-
inal beauty by adequate equip
ment.
Another historical poinl at the
border famed for its associations
with the llasmonean- is the Mo-
di'in area Remnants of terraces
dating back thousands of years
bear witness to the one-time pn
perity of this region, which was
the birthplace ot the Maccabees.
Any way you
figure it...
THE FINEST
WELCOME ^4
TO GREATER MIAMI
I IS WELCOME x
WAGON
A visit irom our hosttss will main
you leel tt home, with her basket
of gifts and answers to questions
about the city, its services and
facilities. Just call .
iWel
come
HI 8-4994
Morris Orlin, founder
^W^W^WA^/^W* 4
WUCOME NEWCOMCRSt
Um Ihii coupon to III ol know you're
hotf.
Ntm___
City------
Please have the Welcome Wagon
Hostess call on me.
I would like to subscribe to
The Jewish Floridion.
Fill out coupon and mail to
Circulation Oept.,
M.P.O. Box 2973, Miami, Flo.
require-1
ork of now ,-o
one leads to ,|lr tombs *
Maccabees right on the JorJ
border, named for the -
President of Israel. v,Unak^J
Zvi, who took special interest
the history of Modi in.
AtWHdttenew oppose OflfaJ
Modi in. 250 acre- h..u. beMrJ
stored for agriculture. The sol
is covered here with heavy ston 'I
and it is not easy to bring it k,,J
to fertility. There are eno3
wells for irrigation, but a daml
built in the neighborhood wiUcdl
lect rain wati rs durum the wlnl
ter. As in all border outposts ec>|
ncmie considerations alone catil
not be the decisive factor, Thel
need to exploit to a maximum thel
land area of Israel has to go handl
in hand with security
ments.
All these outpost- ,,t presentbe-l
iiifi manned by the Army Pioneer!
Settlers Corps will one day be-f
come self-sufficient auricuitu:a||
settlements, run by civilian'
farmers, whether on a collectiveI
or cooperative basis, kibbutz orl
moslKiv. to be decided later A
the course of the next fouryears.l
the Jewish National Fund will^l
up five more such border out [
posts one on the Lebanese bor.l
der. one on the Syrian border,!
and three on the Jordanian bc>r-|
der.
No Man's Land
One of them neai Y .
be ready by November this I
to bolster the di : I
"narrow waist" of Israel,
the Jordan border i- onh 121
from the sea Foi tpos |
the .INK ill prep; re the 11
construct 'lie toads ani I
houses. In addition the Fui
participate in Ihe i stablishment of I
three more outp -'- in thi Xegei I
one on tin I
two in the A |
with Jordan
This program requires esl
ing 5,000 a< res ol
kilometers ol
water and ele I tt> lini I
building the I ns< Fron
very beginnii I
have a re
living so as
tun- for;
where prev iouslj
frontiers in wl '
no man's land
TO THE
STATE OF ISRAEL
AND ITS SUPPORTERS
WE EXTEND OUR WARMEST REGARDS
AND HIGHEST PRAISE
FOR THE MANY ACCOMPLISHMNTS
IN THE 17 YEARS
SINCE THE REBIRTH OF THE NATION
PAUL H. MARKS, CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
FIAGLER FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION u i
Downtown:
N.E. 1st Avenu*
Branch:
Biscayne Shoppi"9
Plii>
ANSWERITE
TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE
CD \ JLLk JE 8-0721
YOU GET MO?T?ALLS WHEN YOUR PHONE 1$
ANSWERED RITE
MODERATE RATES 24-HOUR SERVICE
JEFFERSON JMf- MUKwT0M "
FRANKLIN KAZA NEWTON

+JenMfkridUntr
Pag 7-C
Israel's Relations Abroad

ry
Beach Chapter of Hadassah is cited for its outstand-
r^rticipation in the service of Miami women for Israel
Jon *he occasion of its Sweet Sixteen Israel Bond Lunch-
last year attended by some 800 persons. Citation was
> in the form of a special Scroll of Honor at the Florida
' 0f Hadcssah conference on Sunday at the Seville Ho-
'Left !o right are Miss Lillian Goodman, chairman of the
M Sixteen affair; Mrs. Nat Barth, president of Miami Beach
*iapter; Mrs. Anne Grossman, director of the Israel Bond
tens Division; and Mrs. Fred Jonas, co-chairman with
s Goodman of the luncheon.
Vliami Women's Division
kips Bond Success Here
, ni women in building
k.'el dates back to the earliest
ot the modern Zionist
ham. Through the years, worn-
[have nourished the dream and
l ,> been a mainspring in creal
I. the realitj ol the state of
r
|;.i Miami, women have been a
i factor in helping t<> elevate
fcomnmnitv to the leading DO-
no in the world in aid t<> Is-
| nomic development
11 Israel Bonds
|. orld-acclaimed :
Miami's women is Israel
l;ii Women's Division chair
|kn Anna Brenm r Meyers
[all Mrs Mi yers w is the
k.pient of the coveted Kleanoi
Israel Humanitarian
llhrouahoiit the year, the role of
pmon a- members of the Corps
[Hosts helps to assure the Ble-
ach i>i the [unctions high-
feting the Israel Bond drive.
t; only as part ol the Israel i
pd Women's Division, hut as
[embers i temple and synagogue
perboods and ol leading organ-
k:ions. women play a major
> in the success of all Israel
(t:d dinners, organizational func-
8, anil the climactic and fes-
e Ambassador's Ball in De-
the most dramatic event.-.
[the past year was the "Sweet
ftteen" Israel Luncheon spon-
Nby the Miami Beadi Chap-
tol Hadassah and attended by
1 m 2iio women, This event
| Itentii n on the activities
I Israel Bond... ol ihe Miami
h Chapter ol Hadassah and
f'JSht honor to its leaders and
* entire community,
Again this ye;.r. many hundreds
of members of the Miami Beach
Chapter of Hadassah will join
forces to sponsor one of the ma-
jor events ol the year in the form
of a luncheon In May. highlighting
the famed Givenchy Israel fash
ions.
Continued from Page 2-C
to Latin America In September
and Octotx r He held talks with
Presidents, Premiers and Foreign
Munstev-. in Mexico. Venezuela
and Colombia and addressed both
es of the Mexican legislature.
The scores ol illustri his visitors
from all parts of the world who
were welcomed in Israel during
the year included the President of
Togo, Mr Nicolas Grunitzky; the
Prime Minister ol Denmark. Mr,
Jens Ot'.O Krag; and the Prime
Min*ster of Iceland. Dr. Bjarni
Benediktsson; the Prime Minis
ter of Ds.b mey, Mr. Justin Ahom-
adegbe; the Sultan of Foumban
in Cameroun; the Guatemalan
Foreign Minister; the Norwegian
Minister of Social Affairs; Ugan-
da's Minister of Defense and the |
Interior: the Bolivian Chief of
Staff; a group of 125 alumni of
the French National Institute and
a 38-man delegation from the
Thailand National Defense Col-
lege; editors and publishers from
Africa; delegations from Japan.
Chad. Cambodia, the Ivory Coast
and the Malagasy Republic, and
many other dignitaries.
Premier in Review
Summing up his visits to the
United States and France on July
in. Mr. F.shkol said: "The most
Significant conclusion from these
two visits is that Israel, while
In a joint communique issued
on June 2. after President John-
fortifying and relying upon her
Own deterrent power, physically
and politically, is not alone in Ik r
struggle
son and Prime Minister Eshkol
had completed two days of dis-
cussions on matters of mutual in-
terest and concern during the lat
tfe
T AWAY FROM IT ALL
u'I"?''r- b* I*M
Fmi .
"'"V ti,.. ol .hod,*
: '-. ....!, ,,...;
' "" 9h. .1th .,. 0d .oool
wSte1*.'Th# *
Njo'etiLfJ0^ "K'',, >"'
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Pago 8-C
+jBWlsti ncrkitnr
Miami Prepares to Salute Israel on H|
Celebration Traditionally Opens
Community Israel Bond Campaign
in (srael on "Yom Haatzmauth." there is dan
ung in the streets. Throughout the world, the
lay marking Israels birth sees Jews brought to-
gether in joy and celebration. In Miami, it has be
jorne a custom to celebrate this historic day in
B way which is meaningful to Israels contin-
ued growth as an independent state the Israel
Independence Day Dinner marking the initia-
tion of the annual Israel Bond campaign.
The Israel Independence Dinner in Israel's
17th year will take place Sunday evening. Maj 2.
it the Fontainebleau Hotel.
Added cause for celebration will be the of-
ficial inauguration ol Rabbi Leon Kronish as
chairman Ol the Israel Bond Organization. Leon
ird Rosen will receive the Chairman ot the Year
Award
The Israel 17th anniversary dinner will serve
0 launch what is expected to be the most sue
.-s'ul year in the history of the Israel Bond ef-
i Its.
Pillars of strength in the Israel Bond pro-
gram are the congregational events held each
vear by synagogues and temples under the lead-
1 -hip of their rabbis and lay leaders.
Spearheading this phase of the Israel Bond
campaign will be the congregational dinners of
remple Beth Sholom. Rabbi Leon Kronish: Tern-
pie Kmanu-EI. Dr. Irving I.el.rman: Temple Men-
orah. Rabbi Mayer Abramowitz: Temple Ner
Tamid, Rabbi Eugene I.abovitz: Temple Beth Am
Rabbi Herbert Baumgard: Temple Judea. Rabbi
Morris Kipper; Beth El. Rabbi Solomon Schiff.
Beth Torah. Dr. Max Lipschitz; and Beth David,
Rabbi Sol Landau.
Other important functions will again this
year be undertaken by leading organizations such
;is Hadasaah and Pioneer Women. Labor /.ion
ists. A number of other organizations will for i
first time this year spon* r major dinn r> on
behalf of Israel P.onds. Heading this lisi arc the
B'nai B'rith Indues, and the Zionist Organizatii n.
Inspired by the precedent set b\ Morton Tow
ers this year, a number of high rise apartment
houses are expected to follow suit with Isra 'I
Bond dinners
Climaxing the years activities will be -
"first" in the history of the Miami communit}
a Chanuka Festival, which will bring together
thousands of Miamians to join a galaxie of Bt
at the Miami Beach Auditorium This will be
followed by the traditional Ambassador's Ball at
the end of December, an event which each yeai
focuses nationwide attention on the Miami Jew-
ish community
"%
Seventeen-Branch Menorah
Dedication
J
SAMUEL FRIEDLAND
LEOW
The Israel Menorah of Statehood for the first
time containing seventeen branches, will be dedi-
cated at the Israel Independence Dinner on M;> 2 ai
the Fontainebleau Hotel. The kindling of Israel's
Menorah ol Statehood, first initiate I at th- Ir-.de
pendence Bar Mitzvah Dinner in Miami, has now be
conn- a tradition in Jewish communities thi
out the world In accordance with the custom as it
is piaeticed in the thirty-two countri s where wish
communities gather to celebrate Israel's anniversa
ry. the branches ol the Menorah will be kinJli I b>
Leading citizens ol the community whose affinity
for Israel through the year- has merited for them
this high honor. Shown (left) i- A .1 Mola-ky, Sil
ver Trustee of Israel, at the historic firsl kinditi
of the Israel Menorah of Statehood in Mian
1961, Israels Bar Mitzvah year, when th cus
was first instituted
Stellar Leadei
Outstanding
Miami boasts a high calibre ol leader-, who havet
community service and who have helpe i to make Miami|
in the world on a per capita basis.
Outstanding among them an- former chairmen
Friedlar I, retiring Chairman Leonard Rosen, and Wo
Anna Brenner Meyers
It was .lack Cantor who led Miami lo a ne peak oil
Golden Trustees of Israel nun and women ulwDurcr
Israel
i levati d the leveli
l ui throug
lei 1'r.edli
161 and I
i nt-shatttrl
. 'ircominjl
in the 'orld on
> iat.on, the leaders^
the highest a
l onard Rosenj
in lf)63 and 19641
him national dista
i -- and in areasi
ship, Mia|
- the gran
hanks and liduc.a
In tal
i esteeal
paiticularb lor I
and Ti mples hi
|Mael Bind *!!
In ass
lion, Rabbi Kromil
f.-RS. ANNA BRENNER MEYER'. accomplish!
AN INVESTMENT BORN OF FAITH was the definition of Israel
Bonds when the first issue was made public in the United States.
Today, confidence born of experience, added to faith, is the
broadened motivation not only to the Jewish public bu* to bank-
ing institution*, as well. Seen above is Shepard Broad, chairman
for banks and fiduciaries, greeting Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. McDon-
ald, executive vice president of the First National Bank of Miami,
who have expressed a keen interest in the Israel Bond issue as
a field of investment for First National. Among Miami banks that
have thus far invested in Israel Bonds are Capital National, City
National. Community National Bank of Bal Hcrrbour, Cbuntv Na-
tional Bank of North Miami Beach. Fidelity National. First National
Bank of Hollywood. Jefferson National. Mercantile National. Mi-
ami Beach First National. Miami National and the Seaboard Life
Insurance Company.
Trustees of Israel, have
communi'y
of Mia"11
and Miami's activities for Israel matters of personal ]oy a ^ ^
cation. Above, they are joined by Issie Hecht, Silver ^
krael. at the initial reception where the Israel Independ ned
ner on the eve of her seventeenth year of s'ltehocd was p____

Jmiat) rterMtom
Page *C
.yenteenth Anniversary of Statehood
JACK A. CANTOR
is Key To
t Bond Role
miiiity ol
l&md eitj
Samuel
an Mrs
latin? ih
i SS0.000
lar. Thb
I; locally
I
punib lu
(suited in
Bond cilj
aopre
Fried land
- Ih.
|nnanship
won for
I of bust
L'nder his
1 distinct
|iduai pur
II
f lion Hal bi 1 con Kronish brin i>> the
?sequence ol hi-, leadership in causes, and most
national Israel Bond chairman for Synagogues
fi Kronish helped elevate the national level <>l
ponal efforts to record heights
P the Griatei Miami Israel Bond Organiza
men and women with proven records
RABa! LEON KRONISH
Famed U.S- and Israel Statesmen
Head Independence Dinner Here
Two men uho have achieved rare
ili.vincti n in the governments ot
their respective countries have
been selected i" represent their
nation; at Miami's celebration oi
the iTih year cf Israel's Indepen-
dence, highlighted by the festive
Independence Day Dinner at the
HON. E. ZEV SUFOTT
Pontalnebleau Motel on Sunday
e\ ening, May 2.
I'.. Zev Sufott. Emissary f Is-
rael in the limed Stales, Oxford
graduate, soldier and statesman.
will be Israel's spokesman at the
dinner.
U. S. Sen. John (). Pastore, one
ol the foremost champion- cl Is-
rai l in Congress and one of
America's distinguished orators,
has the unique distinction of be-
ing President Lyndon is. John-
S n's personal choice as keynote
I e.iker.
A member of the l" S. Senate
since 1950, Sen. Pastore is chair-
man of ihe Joint Congressional
Committee "n Atomic Energy and
noted spokesman tor world peace.
Throughout his long career as a
statesman, Sen. Pastore has play-
ed a unique role in national af-
fairs and in American relations
m itli Israel.
Sufott. a leading spokesman of
Israel's Foreign Ministry, will of-
ficially install Rabbi Leon Kron-
ish as chairman ot the Israel Bond
Organization and confer upon
Leonard Rosen, outgoing chair-
man, the Chairman of the Year
SEN. JOHN O. PASTORE
Award, a tribute which singles
him out from among leaders of
Israel Bond campaigns in 32 na-
tions
Golden Book
Lasting Tribute
Names that will live in the chonicles of tsrael
will be those ol Miamians who have taken a vital
role in bringing sttength to Israel in its foimative
.,-ars. To provide lasting public recognition In Israel
for Miami's corps oi Israel Bond supporters', the
Golden Book ol the Year ha- been instituted. In
Israel, the Golden Book will be on permanent dis-
play, reflecting the activities ol world Jewry in the
upbuilding ol Israel
The Golden Book will b compiled at the In
lependencc Day Dinner, with each table h i>i b 'ing
called ii present a scroll bearing ilie signatui > ol
all those attending. During th dinner, a phi lo.
i.iph will be taken ol each table, which will be
placed opposite the scroll and bound into the Gold-
en Book of tin Year
At the end of the year, every temple and or
anization that has had an Israel Bond function
will add a folio to be present) i the Ambassador
i i rael at the Ambassador's Bali The book will
then be transmitted to Israel for public display at a
site dedicated to the chronicles culled from commit
Dr. Irvinq Lehrmctn is seen above with Sam
and Bea Blank, 1964 recipients of the State of
Israel Medallion of Honor, as they view a
replica of the Miami-Israel Golden Book ot
the Year which will reflect the exemplary
role of Miami in the development of the State
of Israel.
hes throughout the world reflecting the ties of
faith and peoplehood Of Israel and world Jewry
women
- Israel has a special place. With the ap-
(evi s ~eventeenth birthday, a group of Patron-Hosts for
b of recrd of the Women's Division of the past and
No ?rea1fr acr>evement for the year ahead, in keepinq
ffesLlr and ,he growing challenge. Left to right are
L L"1- Leor> Kronish, A. C. Fine, Isadore Hecht and
r chamnen of the Women's Division.
A MOMENT OF HISTORY Scenes such as this will be cherished as lit-
tle moments of history which tell the story of a nation aborning and a people
whose brothers and sisters throughout the world have helped to make pos-
sible her birth and her development. Here David Ben-Gurion congratulates
Jack Popick, Miami-Israel Bond chairman of the board on his city's havinq
achieved the highest level of service to Israel reflected in Miami's Israel
Bond record. Prime Minister Levi Eshkol who has visited Miami often, looks
on.

TEMPLE BETH SHIRAH 7500 SW
120th St. Reconstructionist. Rabbi
Morris SkoD. Cantor Herman Gott-
lieb.
I- |da) |. m N' I) -! ti 'l ofl hi -
Sen II" !' .- -
iuod Men in I., a.I. i "hip.
---- ---
TEMPLE BETH SHOLEM of Holly-
wood. 1725 Monroe St. Conservative. I
Rabbi Morton Malavsky. Cantor
Ernest Steincr.
----
TEMPLE BETH SHOLOM. 4144 Chase I
Ave. Liberal. Rabbi Leon Kroniih. |
Cantor David Conviser.
l-"ii.|:i\ s;i;, p.m s..mii>.ii "Abba
Kban'a Pi tponnl for I' ., < on
Karth flrat uf a nerie* "ii Israel.
Saturtla) 1 13 a m B ,i Mltavah:
Michael, Mtn ..f Mr and Mis MorrU
| I: n ik
i TEMPLE B'NAI SHOLOM. 16800 NW
22nd Ave. Conservative. Rabbi S. M. |
Machtei. Cantor Abraham Reiseman.
Prida) 8:30 p.m Sermon "FtameleH*
i .is iil: or i-'i.iin. I. ss i tenth."
rl......i Satur- |
da) '.' a in lui.ii r Coniti egatlon
_._
TEMPLE BETH TOV. 6438 SW 8th
St. Conservative. Rabbi Zevi Green-
wald.
i'i Ida) ID and Jfl |i m
"The Law .iii.i is Satunla) > m
i' f the \V< ek Mm -
. ha :'.'' p in
I ------
TEMPLE EMANUEL 1701 Washing-
ton Ave. Conservative. Rabbi Irving
Lehrman. Cantor Zvi Adler
Prida) s :;., |,-n, National Law I'ay
obai is anci Sermon: "Lan I iti) A '
'hall, iiu*- to America." Satunla) 9
.i in S. in..ti \V. ekl) Port i..ii of the '
I'.ll.l. I'.a: Mltzi .; Steven w.n ..f
Mi .....I Mi- Theodore Kipnia Jun-
oi 'ii-i. Kai Ion Iti 10 a.m In iih m- ,
halL
----
TEMPLE ISRAEL. 137 NE 19th St.
Reform. Rabbi Joseph R. Narot. j
Friday R:1S p.m Service In honor of
' Law Do) Sermon "Religion law
.i lUualon '
--------
TEMPLE JUDEA. 320 Palermo Ave.
Liberal-Reform. Rabbi Morris Kip-
per,
laj 7 3(i p m. Student of fifth ) ar
irew .i.i... \-. in sjrnduati and par-
ticipate in nervli e* Saturday it a.m
---
| TEMPLE MENORAH. 820 75th St.
Conservative. Rabbi Mayer Abram-
owiti. Cantor Edward Klein.
s [J |, I,, \, u ,,ffi,.,.r. vvi|| |.
i Si i mon i adi i Rhip in
a a.in Si ......
Porl Ion ..f Hi. Naw Bar Mltavah
David, win of Mm Itonu Oilman ami
Martin 1,'ilmali
_
TEMPLE NER TAMID. 80th St. and
Tatum Waterway. Modern Tradi-
amm. sssai ... .... .:.
Tins paxe ii T'efored in co-
operjn, ii with the Greater Mi-
ami RdMiimcdl Association.
Coordinutor of features ap-
pearing lifre is
DR. MAX LlPSr.MITZ
I Jpiritual leailer of Beth Torah
C-^ij;regdfioTi of North Midmi
r Beach.
Ffstival symbols: Matza. Lulav. Etrog. Shof;,, b,,, .
membra nee. "e-
Seven days ye shall eat unleavened bread" 1, 236
"... a memorial blast of horns
fruit of goodly trees" (23.40). ,hl
EMOR "And the Lord said unto Moses Speak unto th
priests, the sons of Aaron, and say unto them: There shall
defile himself for the dead among his people: except for big to
that is near unto him. for his mother, and for his father nU
for his son. and for his daughter, and for his brother- anil i
his sister a virgin They shall not take a woman that is
harlot, or profaned: neither shall thev lake a woman nut at '
from her husband" (Lev. 21.1-7).
The high priest "shall take a wife in her vu ud
or one divorced, or a profaned woman, or a harlot, these shall h
not take" (Lev. 21.13-14). No priest with a blemish might
proach the altar to offer a sacrifice the Impure priest might
not even approach the holy food nor eat it No animal with
blemish might be an offering.
The seasons of the holy convocations are then ili'-cribetl
"The seventh day is a sabbath of solemn rest \, shall do no
manner of work '. In the first month, on the fourti i nth dav
at dusk, is the Lord's Passover ... on the fifteenth da) oi thf
same month is the feast of unleavened bread seven dayi \
shall eat unleavened bread" (Lev, 23.36).
The Festival of the First Fruits (Shavout) occurs on the fif.
tieth day after the first day of Passover. "In the seventh month
in the first day of the month, shall be a solemn rest unto you. a
memorial proclaimed with the blast of horns, a hol\ convocation
Ye shall do no manner of servile work Howbeil on the tenth
day of this seventh month is the day of atonement and n
shall afflict your souls and >e shall do no manner oi work in
that same day: for it is a day of atonement, to make atonement
for you before the Lord your God ... On the fifteenth day ol this
seventh month is the feast ol tabernacles for seven days unto
the Lord" I Lev. 23.24 34 .
"And ye shall take you on the first day the fruil ol goodly
trees, blanches ol palm trees, and boughs ol thick trees, and wil.
lows o! the brook, and \e shall rejoice before the Lord your God
... it is a statute lor ever in your generations And
declared unto the children ol Israel the appmntiii -
Lord" (Lev. 23.4041. 441.
This recounting of the Weekly Portion of the Law is ex-
tracted and based upon "The Graphic History of the Jewish
Heritage" edited by P. Wollman-Tsamir, $15 Publisher it
Sftengold, and the volume is available at 27 William St., New
York 5, N.Y. President of the society distributing the volumi
is Joseph Schlang.

THE RABBI SPEAKS FROM HIS PULPIT
Our Duty is Apparent:
Support the C J Appeal
By DR. IRVING LEHRMAN
Temple Emanu-EI s
Our sages of the Talmud tell us
thai the righteous have no peace in
this world or in the world to come.
By this they imply that one can-
not lie truly righteous unless he
responds to the needs and the
challenges about
him. for how can
a self-respecting
human being re-
main silent and
indifferent in the
face of problems
that face his com-
munity and his
pet pie?
it is this type
of righteousness
that we need so
badly today as
we enter the final
Stage of the Com-
bined Jewish Ap-
peal campaign of
lSba. The opportunities of building
our community are enormous. We
live in a par! of the country upon
which is focused the attention of
the entire Jewish world, and we
have the obligation to project the
image of a community willing to
accept its full share of responsib-
ility for its fellovs-man.
The instrument through which
DR. LfHRMAN
tional. ".linn Eugen* Labovitz.
Cantor Saul H. Breeh.
Krlila; B I p.m. kSaiui d 8:45 a m
TEMPLE OR OLOM. Conservative.
8755 SW 1tn St.. Miami. Rabbi
Samuel April Cantor Nico Feldman.
Pi -i.ts s ;ii pin. Ofrlcera and bostnl
ol Ti rapk SUii rh.....i iuuJ m, n Objli
will be Installed l.s ILil.l.l April. Sat-
. I I.*. H.lll
TEMPLE SINAI OF NORTH MIAMI.
12100 NE 15th Ave. Reform. Rabbi
^wv dntor r*het Gala-
Friday 8:1S p.m. Sermon: "What Jew-
ish 1 Vital." (iv... iu Tbi-ir I'hllili.ii
Suiurnuj. ,1 :i.rii. IUu Miuvah: Win-
i.m. son ,,f Mr. .iikI Mrs ilenrstr Jai-h-
maii.
-----------------
TEMPLE TIFEBETM JACOB). S8J
E. 4th Ave., Hiaieah. Conservative.
TEMPLE ZAMORA. 44 Zamera Ave.
we express tin- responsibility si
Federation. This is the parent boM
of our community, which nourishes!
and sustains all the causes depend-!
ent upon it. such as Mount Susl
Hospital, the Home for the Agedl
the "Vs." the Bureau of Jeii|
Education, and man) other oft I
standing agencies These msmvl
tions and agent it would not Kl
able to function without the lo|
and attention given to them
Federation.
In addition to its local goakl
Federation is the instrument l
service and help to national |
overseas causes, espt :iaUj theUM
with its overwhelming life-savuM
responsibilities ol rescuing in|
sands of ow people from the dart-i
esl corners of Bur ;< and .unoi
and transporting 'i";i; '"a ""^l
dignity and sell respect m
State of Israel.
This is our dut> as a m
this is the raison d'etre ol feflen
tion; this is our commit"''1"1*
Jews, as prescribed by the
ol our ancient rabbis '&*> J
is responsible for ever) ,u>l'rJe^
It is my privilege U> tyfJ'J
chairman of this .-..m|aign i*
second year, and i plead*;*;
to share this Miuvaki5
.again. I pra. thai .' "*
I us a thousandfold wth Hh *|
logs.
Conservative. Rabbi Mersh.i '*
Cantor Ben Dickson. |lrrt(.
Krldaj *:IS |i m "
ml U..11I 'Bui U ,.
S, ,,..,,: "Th. I ,.,f^
liar atltainh VlUn
\i.,\ Onwi
TEMPLE ZicTn.'sOOO JJ^wX I
Conservative. Rabbi *
man. ___
TIFERETH leMABL j^Hr
Ave. Conse'vativs. s
I'n.i.v s:S P. m -; ', h,i.J
SlsLll.ui.il. *5lji
"IVrtlan of tttrW rt nl
YOUNG iSKAtL. tf.JS Hi*
lOUNG ISKAtL. tp ifl *
OrthodoM. Rabbi *"' J
rUM- :W1 ?' ,'-"";"Vn'j.1-
i.sn: "l'-l"-n'!'. -
L.
aliaolia 6-ao i'1"

Page 12-C
Jwisti rkrtdtor
J^day.ApnlJ
Miami Federation Greets Anniversary
our continued efforts
Jewish men.
to a I if,.
Both the Greater Miami Jew-
ish Ft deration and the United
Jewish Appeal were established
27 years ago. and ten year- after.
Mr efforts helped in the establish-
ment of the State cf Israel, which
is currently celebrating its 17th
birthday as an independent and
> ibrant young democracy," Sid-
ney Lefcc.ur;. president of Federa.
lion, noted this week.
"We. of the Greater Miami .lew
ish Federation, are extremely
proud of she millions of lives that
f were saved and are continuing to
be saved through our annual phil-
anthropic campaigns. The dollars
W8 have raised for United Jewish'
Appeal have done mueh toward
bringing people from lands of fear
and oppression to ;he State of
Israel, where they have become
useful citizens, making their own
important contributions to this
yor.ng nation.
'Israel, whose 17th anniversary'
we join in celebration, still re-
tains its policy ol taking Jews in
from all pans of the world re-
gardless of age. physical, or men
tal handicap. Among the 65.000
who will come in during 1905 will
he eld. blind and sick people. Is-
rael welcomes everyone as a
member of the family and pro-
vides them with the opportunity
to Start a useful life in a free and
independent nation.
"We are proud that the dollars
raised through our Federation
and Combined Jewish Appeal
campaign helps \r> provide educa- i
tion. housing, medical care, job
retraining, and even teaching of
the Hebrew language, so that the
newcomers may make the adjust-
ment to become productive and
useful citizens of the Stale of Is-
rael. This small nation, whose
borders have been surrounded by
hostile neighbors, has grown in
such a manner as to serve as an
example to all newly independent
nations.
"We, Of the Greater Miami
Jewish Federation, take this' op-
portunity to restate our pride in
the growlh and development of
the State of Israel, and to pledge
, "wnwtsj
';" land. May Z
be marked .is a
anniJ
imc ot,
progress for the suu -
"
OFFICES OF DISTINCTION by PAVnii
Office designs
end furnishings
sMreof from manufacturer
Combined Jewish Appeal Views
Dr. Irving Lehrman, chairman.
1965 Combined Jewish Appeal
campaign, noted this week that
one of t.he greatest achieve-
ments ol i ur lifetin e has been the
establishment oi the state of Is-
rael which, in celebrating Its 17th
anniversary, has become the ful-
rillment of our historic dream and
the haven for displaced Jewry
from all parts oi the world. Israel
is more than a dream. It is a
land where dignity and freedom
pre\ ail [or our brethren.
Important Partner
"As c bairn an of cur Combined
.'wish Appeal, I want to salute
the State of Israel and its popula-
tion of 2.500 000 people from all
countries and backgrounds who
are helping to build this young
democracy,
"The United Jewish Appeal, an
important partner in our Miami
Combined Jewish Appeal cam-
paign, has been cited not only tor
the transportation, rescue and re-
settlement o millions of immi-
grants now living in the State of
l>rael. but has also been cited as
the greatest voluntary philanthro.
pic program at any time in his-
tory.
We are proud that our Com-
bined Jewish Appeal has contrib-
uted almost S13.000.000 to the I i
ted Jewish Appeal and its agen-
< i during t e 27 years of activ-
Itj in the Gr ater Miami eommu.
oltj
"We are proud to salute the
State Of Israel and the valiant
men. women, and children "ho
have overcome tremendous hard
ships to build a land of which we
can all be justifiably proud.
"Mrs. Lehrman and I recently
returned from a special mission
to Israel and to Europe as the
guests of former Israel Prime
Minister Mo-he Sharetl. On our
tour, we visited all parts of Is-
rael, including small villages, the
k i butzim and the big cities.
What Impressed us mosl about
Israel was the sense of pride and
dignity of Us people and the way
in which new. mers were made
tu feel a[ home. The welcome they
received from the Israelis gave
a meaning to our Combined Jew-
ish Appeal that cannot be trans-
hit ed into mere words.
"The Israelis' full acceptance of
newcomers without regard to
background, to financial and
physical status, was an accept-
ance of the ancient rabbinical
tradition that every Jew is respon-
sible for every other Jew
'Will Pay Back'
Tins, to us, is the meaning e,i
the State Of Israel an its 17t'i
birthdaya meaning we can nev-
er forget and which will always
be typified by the newly-arrived
immigrant who was brought to
Israel by Combined Jewish Ap-
peal and United Jewish Appeal
funds, and said to me. "Rabbi.
we'll pay back everything, every-
thing you have given us to start
:i new lite '
Events Calendar
Continued from Page 4-C
Nov. 30 TABAI, Africa-Israel Stamp exhibition, opens in
Haifa
Dec. 14
Dec. 23
Scopus.
Dec. 30
Prime Minister Eshkol resigns.
Finance Minister presents 1965-66 budget,
Jordanian troops wound three Israeli guards on Ml
26th Zionist Congress opens in Jerusalem.
1965
Jan. 3 Danish Prime Minister arrives for official visit.
Jan. 15 lordanians lire on Israeli patrol in Jerusalem.
Jan. 27 Deputy Premier Abba Eban announces counter-mea-
sures against Arab boycott.
Feb. 3 UN Secretary General's representatives arrive to in-
vestigate tens.on on Jordan-Israel border.
Feb. 15 Kin -set condemns Bonn's decision to stop security aid
to Isr.v. I
Feb. 16 Tenth Convention of Mapai. Israel Labour Party.
opens

WE CAN PLAN INSURANC
TO SUIT YOU! A
32
YEARS OF SUCCESSFUL
INSURANCE PLANNING
FOR HUNDREDS OF
SATISFIED CLIENTS.
998 S.W. 1st St. e Miami
Phone 379-7555
"It's n t statistics. It's human
beingsmen. women and chil-
drenwho embody this attitude,
and who are the real celebrants
of this anniversary. On this anni-
versary ol Israel's Independence,
we pledge to redouble our efforts.
SO that every man. woman and
child seeking a life of freedom
can be brought to the State of
Israel and settled in this vibrant
young nation which is truly an ex-
ample of democracy and free
drill "
Desks, Chairs,
Sofas, Credenzas,
Lamps, Everything
or the Office of Distinction
Hd'/lOW

tApnl
30, 1965
Jen1st) nrriditr
Page 13-C
>W
Tension in Foreign Affairs
,ued frcm
Page 1-C
of
U the dispelling
, thai Israel will be
in any cur-
isioes
i to icquiesct
clher rights. The same
revocations along
have been on
, also to pi i
lor whii
n*e lately
hlflOM With Bonn
Ucl of the West German
C to Nassefs threats
rionaU led to a regression
nan-Israel relations during
l Culminating in a
in ,i relations be-
ke two countri< s in Febru-
Ijowinu the announcement
Bonn G veil nenl about
Limcnti't the arms agree
| Nasser's at
i risisand
| re.i lent
iblic oc-
,, dei in *'eat
a Bonn
I i with a pro-
I '"' re
filth prop isal.
I In Israel
r. by a
Knesset
i the e*i
| ei ween
I onlj will
I I f r o in
V I'll
L (he 11
I Arab
n the po
i nulli-
crisis
appear
| :i.. run
lubnous
; N i\ oca
ainst a
:. 111
| mount', n in the
has induced the Is-
forernmenl to exert every
order to strengthen ties
hemlly stati tli old and
his connecti in. mention
in tin first instance
cementing n| closer ties
three Western Powers
the manifestations ot
hip thai came to the fore
: the visits ol Prime Minis
H Eshkol in the United
Frame and Britain.
Autml Understanding
; tin- Prime Minister's
the United States, the
understanding between
Ca and Israel u as deepened.
derstanding found exprec-
i*o in mailer- vital to Is
pwurity. as i\ell as in the
P of American-Israel col-
I T a solution of one
ral problems facing
Pttel and manj other coun-
tries, the desalination of sea wa-
ter by means of nuclear energy.
The talks between the President
of the United States and the Is-
latl Prime Minister were contin
ued both through regular diplo-
matic contacts, and latterly du-
ring the visit of Mr. Averill Har
riman. President Johnson's spe-
cial representative.
Mr. Eshkol's visit to France
served a- an opportunity of dem-
ons: rating and consolidating the
traditional friendship between the
two countries, when President
deGaulle reiterated his definition
of Israel as a friend and ally of
Fiance Lastly, the frime Minis-
ter's visit to rrfitain -.orved as an
opportunity of strengthening the
tits between Israel and Britain.
if airing the problems <>t the
Middle East and
olii ies ot the two Govern
ments
In June of last yen-. ;i compre-
hensi' e 11 mmercial agreement
.. -; m d at Brussels, after al
wo years of negotiations.
b ; Israel and the Eui
i' !i!iinui \i ;. rket Under this
mi i '..ii.- facilities were
. L':i items of lsra li ex-
rts ti the countries "f the C m
Mat kel \ Joinl Con
al o s up for a clarifica
tion i ill pi blems ai is ng in
I i ., relati ns Although
this i nl ill""- not meet
- inn-! important demand,
it nonetheless constitutes a verj
valuable economic and political
achievement in tliat it bases the
conomic relations between Is-
rael and the European Market on
a contractural basis
Association Recommended
With the introduction of the var
nuis protective tariffs in addition
to customs on citrus, and with the
preparations for negotiations be-
tween the Market and various
North African countries, the ur-
moved
GREATER MIAMI
bi .? ?i!"s' A"h baskets
I" JM information it,aut the
':; """> t'ospitaiitv.
tu,'\. J ?.eneroi,-
* p"on

HI 8-4994
S*W"C0ai,
"""'i f i.t u. kno.u-
Kate-*
B* 2973. Miami. Fl.. \
gent need has recently come to
the fore of amending the agree-
ment. These problems will short-
ly be discussed at the forthcoming
meeting of the committee. In
this connection, mention should
be made c| the decision of the
European Parliament, whiih en-
joys advisory rights, to recom-
mend the association of Israel
with the European Common Mar-
ket.
Latin America
During the past year. Israel
continued iis efforts to foster
tu j with developing countries,
both on the economic plane as
well as in the field of technical
collaboration, through bilateral
agreements as well a- through po-
litical ties. Israel maintains tech-
nical and economic collaboration
with a bo u t 80 countries fr< m
\\ h h some 2.100 student have
ei me in Israel in the past year
w h 11 e about 700 Israeli experts
have gone out for work in 55
< untries Such collaboration em-
braces numerous and varied
(ielc's of acti\ itj the mosi impor
taut K ing those ol agriculture,
water development, cooperation,
n a n I y nth mo\ i ments,
medicine, engineering, vocational
training, public administration
50< ial sen ic< i I- ael's poli
> 5 in rengthei ing ties with the
new states in Africa has been
lined als pa si year.
I now has _'7 Legations in
Africa, t1, is occupying fourth
place among the countries of the
in this respect The Ai ab
States have spared no effort to
thwart the relations between Is-
rael and the African States, but
their machinations have borne
no fruit. The ties with Africa have
been strengthened in the past
year through the visits to a num-
ber ot African coun.ries by the
Minister for Foreign Affairs, the
Speaker of the Knesset and by-
various delegations of members
of the Knesset.
The ties between Israel and the
countries of Latin America were
also strengthened during the past
year. The number of Israel Le-
gations in Latin America has ris-
en to 14. which is also the number
of Latin American Legations in
Israel, the majority of them in
Jerusalem. The scope of technical
collaboration between Israel and
the Latin bloc has also expanded.
The number of Israeli experts in
Latin America has doubled from
37 to 74. while the number of stu-
dents from these countries under-
going training in Israel has risen
from 288 i" 360. The hope that
the friendly relation- between
Israel and the Latin American
countries will continue to grow, is
well founded
On the other hand, there has
been mi | 1, ti in the I e
be 1 ween Israel and the Amu:
countries, n o r has any ba s I c
change taken place m the rela-
tions with the countries of the
Communist blue in Eastern Eur-
ope. The friendly relations with
Poland have continued. Note must
also be made of a certain rap-
prochement in relations with Ru.
mania. Trade relations with Yu-
goslavia. Hungary. Poland and
Rumania have expanded. It is also
possible to point to certain prog-
ress in cultural relations, includ-
Continued on Page 14-C

Page 14-C
-Jenlsti Flcrldiar!
Israel's Ties Abroad Expanding
Continued from Page 7-C
torce against any country."
Agreement was also reached to
undertake joint studies on prob-
lems of desalting sea waterthe
knowledge and experience gained
from the joint effort to be made
available to all COtintriei with
Rising Tensions
Continued from Page 13-C
ing an exchange of artists and
of variouj delegations between
l-rael and the Soviet Union.
On the political plane, however,
the departure that we are all ho-
ping for has not come about. The
Soviet Union continues to be the
main supplier of arms to Egypt
and to other Arab countries, and
has stood behind the Arab States
in all disputes with the State of
Israel. Nor has any turn for the
better taken place in the situation
Of Jewry in the USSR, despite the
la.'; that enlightened public opin.
ion throughout the world has
evinced sensitivity and growing
concern for this serious human
and national problem.
The State of Israel is entering
upon the eighteenth year of its
existence militarily, economically
and politically stronger, confident
ot its strength but alert to the
dangers lurking for it. In the light
of these dangers, the state of Is-
rael will increase its efforts to
consolidate the existing friend-
ship with many states, to acquire
n e w friends and primarily to
strengthen the unity of the Jewish
people for which the State was
established, for it is the safest
guarantee for the security and
well being of the State.
TALMUDK SEMINAR
Of THE AIR
"Daf Hashovua'
For the 11th Consecutive Year
Miami Jewry wilt have the oppor-
tunity of learning a page of the
Talmud, translated and explained
by
Rabbi Pinchas M. Teitz
Scholar and fameui Authority
0* the Talmud
Rohhi of Elizabeth and
Dean of Me i if to of New Jersey
STATION WEDR-FM
99.1 on Your FM Radio Dial
SUNDAY, 1:30 P.M. to 2 P.M.

learn
anew
language
before your
Bon Voyage
speak to
BERLITZ
now.
242 N.E. 2nd Ave.
Miami, Fla.
FR 1-3686
water deficiencies American
readiness to cooperate with Israel
in research and development on
this subject had been announced
by President Johnson on Feb. 6
at the Weizmann institute dinner
in New York.
Experts in Israel
Four United States experts came
to Israel on July 27 to examine
the feasibility of the project to-
gether with Israeli experts and
an observer from the Interna-
tional Atomic Energy Agency. Af-
ter further meetings in the I'nited
States, the joint team released
their report oil Oct. L't>. recom-
mending that the U.S. and Israel
(iovenmients engage ,i consulting
firm to prepare detailed studies
for a dual purpose nuclear power
and desalting plant, to be in op-
eration by 1971.
It was envisaged that this would
provide between 17.i and 200
megawatts of electricity and be-
tween 125 and 150 million cubic-
meters of pure water I four cubic
meters of water approximate 1.000
gallons i a year and would be
many times larger than any plant
now in opera;ion. The contract for
the feasibility study was awarded
to Kaiser Engineers and Catalytic
Construction Co.. who sent a five-
man team to start the survey in
Israel at the end of January.
Reviewing his talk with Presi-
dent De Gaulle, who had repeat-
edly referred to Israel as "our
friend and ally." Mr Eshkol said
that he had emphasised Israel's
fervent desire for peace and
pointed out the gravity of the en.
couragement that aggressive rul-
ers might draw from the altitude
of powers who do not throw their
weight into the balance on the
side of peace.
"I found the President extreme-
ly well informed of what we are
doing and fully appreciative ol
our great development work in
Israel and our readiness to co-
operate with young, newly liber-
ated, developing countries." he
said.
During discussions between Mr.
F-!ikol and French Cabinet Min-
isters. Israeli proposals for co-
operation between the two coun-
tries in oceanography and arid
zone research met with "sympa-
thetic attention and a positive
approach."
Friday. April
LEGAL NOTICE
301
WEDR-FM,
BAGELS FOR BREAKFAST
WITH REUBEN GUBERMAN, M-F 10 A.M.-12 NOON
FROM DUBROWS, SUNDAYS 12:30 P.M. (STUDIO)
JACOB SCHACHTER
11 A.M.-12 Noon, MONDAY-FRIDAY, SUNDAY, 3:15 P.M.
FROM THE BLACKSTONE HOTEL
T0RAH HOUR
RABBI TIBOR STERN, SUNDAY, 12 Noon
THE JEWISH WORLD
WITH JAY BUSHINSKY, SUNDAYS 1:30 P.M.
MIAMI'S COMMUNITY
RADIO STATION
WEDR-FM,
NCCJ Elects
Dr. Sterling Brown
By Special Report
NEW YORKThe National Con-
ference of Christians and Jews has
elected I)r Sterling W. Brown, exe-
cutive vice president since 1953, to
become president effective July 1.
He succeeds Dr. Lewis Webster
Jones, president since 1958. who an-
nouaeed last summer that he would
retire June 30.
Educator, minister and former
government consultant, Dr.
Brown has held several executive
posts with NCCJ since he joined
the civic organization in 1943. He
is the third president since NCCJ
was founded in 1928.
The NCCJ Board of Governors.
meeting at the St. Moritz Hotel
here, voted unanimously to accept
the recommendation of Dr. Brown
by a six-man selection committee,
which had been considering candi-
dates since Dr Jones announced his
retirement.
Robert D. Murphy, former career
diplomat who is Catholic co-chair-
man of NCCJ stated, on behalf of
, his two fellow cix-hairmen and the
, Board of Governors that "Dr.
, Brown's election cape a distinguish
] ed career of 22 years association
; with the work of. the Conference."
(Carrol M. Shanks, president of
Universal Controls. Inc.. is the
Protestant co-chairman and Adni.
Lewis L. Strauss tret), former Se-
cret ary <>f Commerce, is the Jewish
co-chairman.)
IN THE COUNTY 1
IN AND FOR DAD?G8C4
p-or,oa Pn^pV^nI
in in: i:,vNo,Wi-c 1
t Ar,T,,cf,To"IT0
Having eta S*F"
Said Dm..i. ''
JZ ;::\..!:;: i
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ty, I loi i
Dad, .. ,
,,,,,,.. ,.:
;.:',:;,!;.'; .
fount), Flo, J
month* i
l.ubllcal
barred
Dated at J J
d ..i April "
i
By: lewis k M ^ ';;;T/l
An.,,,.-
All mi ii t -
250 N.E I7il
IN THE COUNTY JC-DGESrnJ
IN AND FOR DiDEC0UN?J
FLORIOA IN probate'
No 6618:
IS RK i:-:.,-.
PACLIXK Iti.lMXsoN
Di. ..
NOTICE TO CREATORS
To All II, ,,""*l
Vou an hi J
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mandr which 1
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LEGAL NOTICF
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
11TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND
FOR DADE COUNTY. FLORIDA
IN CHKNCERV
No. 65 C 4,04
h vm n,n si c wi.k
Mali
\ -
\ r.U'l,K
I,, n
NOTICE TO DEFEND
V. .1 m:i RX I'Al'I.K VRE HERE-
I'.V XiiTIKIED I" I
..i I|void hi h
thin O i-. and ~, : > .......>
hi I'la Itorney, RK 'HARI
\ LTSHI'l.ER s. rbold Rlda Mi-
ami. I' Maj 2".
implnfht ill in
-, ,i \,\ \
Dated \,.:.l ii |M.">.
i: H i.i' \Tiii:i;\i.\N"
Cli rk ol ih, Circuit i-,,mi
B) K M I.V.MAN
I i.|,un i l.rk
4 16-2 :- to. !i T
IN THE CRCUIT COURT OF THE
ELEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN AND FOR DADE COUNTY.
FLORIDA. IN CHANCERY
NO. 65C-4346
I.RON VRll \l 1*1 !.,ll..ii,l ..ii.l RITA
I'lllKI'I.AM'. Ins uii. .
Rail
JESSIE lluKZEl.LINi ,. i idngle
. I'll AKI.ES III IRZELLIXI '.
I al.,
I iefendant*
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
0 IENXIE III ilt/.KI.I.IX, I
All.,nil, Ainiiie
A, Ian, i, City, \. ,\ Jel B9} :
CHARLES Zi iRZELLIXl >, and il
man Ii d, Hi 'RZBLlJNi i,
his wife Realdence I'nknown; and
All unknown parties claiming by,
throuKh '.i,,,i,: ,.i igalnal them,
who in.11 dead <
knou ii ,,, i dead ,,i alive
Viil' ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED
thai ., complain! to Pom Ion Agree-
on in i", l ii, ,i ,i, umberini
Block 3, ERIBDLASD .MAN-
1 IR, .....rding tu ill.- Plat Book 62
ii I "age at, .,f ih. Public Record*
of i'.- County, i"
hai be-i ,lied agalnat >ou, and you
I !:, ebj quired to mi Ve a i -i > "f
your An-u,, ,,i pleading i,, the Com-
plaint on I'l.i,mills Attorney, .1 DA-
VID LIEBMAX, 603 Lincoln Road
U hi,in.. Mi.uni Reach, Floi Ida
.111,1 file the original Ajiawer <>, plead-
ing in the office ol the Clerk "f the
abut, i 'oui, ,,ii ,,i before the -' II ii daj
,,f April, IMS If you fiiil in do so,
Judgement bj default \sill i"- taken
agalnat >..ii r,.r the relief demanded
in i he i tomplalnt.
Thin notici Hhal be published one*
, .i, h ,-, k i.,i four 'i 11 ireeke In the
JEW l.-M I I.i iRIDlAN
DOSE A.NIi URDEUED :il Miami.
Dada iTounty, Florida, ilils Slat da)
"i April, IMG
E n LEATHERMAN
i'i. rk of Circull Court
iSaal) Bj K M I.Y.MAN'
11. put \ Clerk
I 26-30 S, T-H
ty i ,, 111 j
the Umi J
,,f. the -.,! .. I
Dated .., Mini
day of Au \
E \l:l.i: It, illlXSOX
A- Rxi
Kii-i p lb
, the 16th dn if Ap
' n:\i.\i; t'VPI \ ol
Bj David \l si
Attorney for E\i
T.l. S32-472I
833 Arthur tlodl
Miami Reach, i"' ,
4 -
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TfJ
ELEVENTH JUDiCiAL CIRCUltf
FLORIDA IN ANDFORDAOi
COUNTY IN CHANCERV.I
No. 65 C 4067
IS RE: AI'i'i'TI, \ :
MAKI \ TRIN V ItltKKPLOYl
A Mk
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION |
Ti i r.M'i. 11 i:i:i'Kl<
ii ,\ -
lal \l .
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May 17
RtEKEI.N I ,
ITo Col.....

SLN.SER,
.., SUIT FOR DIVORCE
1 li SINUEH
ney, N'l'.i
., iam Bldg., Miami.
the original Answer or
, nice of the Clerk
, rl on or before Ihe
. ay. 1965 If you fall
defaull win be
i you for the relief de-
'ill ,,f Complaint.
I '11 lie publahed once

Page 16-C
* U%%i(t Hr/rjrfitr
Fridcn
Israel's Relations With W. Germany
Relations with Germany were
mentioned in almost even for-
eign policy statement by Prime
Minister Levi Eshkol and Foreign
Minister Gold Meir ami were re
peatedly raised in the Knessi: b)
the Opposition. On May 4. after
an out-poken demand by Mrs
Meir that the West German (In
Mizrachi Women
To Tour Israel
By Special Report
An "Independence Tour" soon-
eored i>> the Mizrachi Women's or
ganuation 't America, will leave
New Y< rk on Ma) l' to join in the
celebration of the lTtii anniversarj
>1 the establishment ol Israel on
Maj t;. it was announced here al
national headquarters of the wo
i ten's organization.
The group is scheduled i" \ isit
Prance before returning t" New
'.(iik on Ma> -'
members will be guests -'t
,n reception in Jerusalem's Town
Hall on Wednesday, Ma) :>. and the
following da) witness the annual
Independence P. s *'h eh is
held in Israel's major cities
rotating m hedule, and ihi> year "ill
take place in T< 1 A\ iv.
Highlights ol the tour include ;.
four-day swing through Galilee and
Ihe northern part of the country:
. journey into the Nege\ .i- far a-
Sodom. the lowest point n earth;
special programs arranged by
youngsters <>! Mizrachi Women's
cliildren's v illages, settlement
houses and vocational hmh schools;
and a three-da) stopover in which
ih
rons, and ihe Versailles Palace

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PHASE CALL US FOR PICK-UP
THE JEWISH HOME FOR
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Ph. 696-2101
ROOF
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V- SS8T
UVNS ASSET
ernment should "undertake with
out delay" the measures neces-
Bar) to stop the work of the Ger-
man scientists working on i.'w de-
velopment of weapons <>i mass
destruction in Egypt, the Knesset
reiterated its resolution of Mar.
20, ii>3. demanding "urgent mea-
sures by the West German au-
thorities to put an immediate e. d
to this criminal activity."
'I his demand was repated by the
Prime Minister on Oet. 19. when
he emphasized "the real danger
involved in their activi.ies, espe-
ciaHy when we remember the em.
phasis on long-term planning in
the Arab war machine that is 'ii
11, ted against us."
Mr. Eshkol issued a warning;
"In the international situation as
: ;, day it is difficuh, nay,
dangerous, to speak ol local dis-
\ w ai that ma) start it'i
L.rab aggression against Israel is
liable to spread b< yond the ion
- this area and threaten a
large-scale conflagration This
consideration adds double force
to one specific demand for the
cessation of the German scient-
ist?' activities in the service of
the Egyptian machine."
Speaking in '.he Knesset on N n
18. Deput) I'r :ne Minister Abba
Khan expressed "profound disap-
pointment and indigation" at the
West German Government'i in
tention to alhJW the Statute of
Limitations to come into force.
"Humanity has known no more
shocking lesson in the effects I
malicious hatred :han that whl h
emerged frcm the annals ol Naz-
ism. This lesson must not be
s\u pt a\< ay in the stream i I
oblivion." Mr. Ebon said.
The countr) was shocked bj
the rep rted intention *f the West
Herman Government to halt its
securit) aid to Israel In order to
e Egypt The Knesset ex-
I eased these feelings on Feb 15,
after hearing i statement by the
Prime Minister, wh,i declared
that "this intentionif carried
< utwill be a sum n ler to the
Eeyptian ruler's policy of bos-
tilit) to Israel and an enccurage
ment for it~ implementation
The House approved the Govern
merit's decision to demand that
"the German Government lulfil
i;s obligatioi 9 to Israel in t!ie let-
ter and the spirit."
On Mar. t. the Government of
Ihe German Federal Republic an-
in unced that i. had decided to
I i I os the establishment Of dip-
lomatic relatio' < with Israel, and
o.i the same day Chancellor Er-
rs d s;nl a special envoy. Dr.
Kurt Birrenbach, to discuss with
In Government of Israel the cm-
plex ol probjejni pending between
the two countries, On Mar. n the
i; vernment of i-rael decided to
a cept the West German Govern-
ment's proposal, and on Mar. 16
r r i m o Minister Levi Eshkol
brought this decision to the al
lentil n
i roved the decision by '
29, with 10 abstentions
Mr Eshkol said that, while Is
rael'j polic) I wards Germany
, n affected by the memo-
iec ol the past, "we did not gh >
up hope ol seeing Germany casl
ff in the exes ol *he world
the appalling hej
-' 'l )ing ncwfl
' tations ith k]
ish people i id
I : ."sal nas of
ance under the
|-i'" -. | J
significant exarn]
l o the cm
Israel's Arah nel
kel sum mi
ci ndci
erges front the
beyond the limit]
act, but even tl
paralleled I
npt i from tH
n oi thi ,
sive ta k tl
gem "ation >,,
S'. te ol !
OTAR
HEARINI
WHIL6 Y(
Imperial Hear
14 N.E 2nd A,
TtVS -
41111
ALL SIZES
*
7'
REGoodrich
Cur
Yeai
7/ ':/. '4
rsoo n.w : f
N. MIAMI BEACH
I7C0 N.I. l(
^
Xl

rael Marks 17th Anniversary May 6 fe wish Flor idian Florida. Friday. April 30. 1965 Section C prael Water Carrier will brinq water from ic. oi Galilee to the parched Negsv. The r irtery, which meanders down a o; ISO miles of country, carries 250 milU .. me'3rs of water annually. Israel ha<5 built thi-_ National Water Carrier in full Tcxord with the Unified Water Plan drawn up for the region in 1955 by the late Ambassador E:ic Johnston of the United Stales, then Presiden' Eisenhower's special representative. HE ROSE TO THE HEIGHTS FROM THE RANKS kvi Eshkol: Man Behind \is Country's Development was born Levi nik .:. o .,; i o, iii the KM V p "i Russia, on Oct. 2ft. He :< ccivid ;i traditional edp' 1 % later continued his in \ ilna. an important % I '/ % nisi activity, wh re I"'' I the Zionist Yout I Move %  here, loo, that K-\ \AB0UT THE MAN  % i anniversary of in '" % l< i' tails nn the til 'i the Hebrew month This year, '.lie date is 6. June 26. i Petach Tikva. where he bepan work as an agricultural laborer. He was elected to the Workers Committee in Petach Tikva, and his first "economic" job was manager of the workers' kit hen in the village. Afterwards, he was among the founders of the "Avoda" group, which carried out agricultural work on a contractual basis, and as a number of this gr -I'l) he worked on the lands : v ii i and Kiryal Anavim sci;l 'nients ne % mee ing with "'< i Jchnscn and ofiii the United States % i r some ten iMeetire s with p ,.,. n e h fident Charles de Gaulle Br, l h I'l .me Mini.,-r I \W ,., (Esta'Hsh.rent of dplorelations wi h the We t Bnin Federal Ri ufclic. n n ? i commercial "*nt at Brussels bel f l>"ael and the Euro M> t'i i .iion Market. 1 this man of sui h dypie purpose and diploma : 'graphy rl Levi |Kl 1063 on the banning of nuclear tests have so far not mati rialized. Ten ion is. in tact, rising in the various sensitive in the world, especially in Southeast Asia and in Congo. The crisis :n international relate ns also tends to undermine the au.hcrity of the United Nations Si i .i di  i lopments on the inter i I. nal sine in onlj increase the concern ab ml the situation in the Middle East. For even when a certain relaxation in world relations was imminent, doubts wi re still gnawing at the heart as to w h e i h e r such mitigation would take place also in the Middle East. Nasser's dictatorial and expansive regime in Egypt remains today, as in years past, the focus of unrest in the Middle East. Balance of Power II is he who inflated tension in the region to the extent of upnetting the balance ol power and oi threatening war It is he who has protracted the war in Yemen for the third year now and who is preventing a settlement of the dispute, ft is he who is the principal factor in fanning unrest in A d e n. as well as in the Arab Shi ike'oms, and in the Sudan. It is he who is playing such a leading role in fanning civil war both in Cy] .'US and in the Congo. It is he wh heads the political strife and the preparations for a possible military showdown against Israel Tine. Nasser docs not want war with Israel s i long as he thinks Israel is strong enough to bring h'm defeat. But lather than choose the path of abatement and of reducing differences, he has embarked n the road oi increased armaments, and iinstigating the other Arab stalls to espouse a policy ol wild adventure against Israel. He is als i exerting unrestrained i res-sure on other states to submit to the boycott ol Israel. The ser ions economic crisis under which Egypt is laboring as a result of Nasser's military adventures in Yemen, and ol his exaggerated aimaments policy, did not induce \aser to desist from his danger ous machinations and to concen 11 atc on restoring his country'* econ my and its development; it only succeeded in increasing his tin trammelled aggressiveness National Water Carrier In the past year. Israel c nple ed the til -t stage cl the National Water Can ii r. the lai gest de< el cpmcnl project in the history <>l the country. The completion of |. enti 11 : ise is nol onlj an ee cnomic and engineering feat of the '-;i eati st magnitude, it is also a political achievement of pri mar) imp irtance, sine the Vrah S'ates aim primarily against 1i a< I's dc\ eicpmenl a n d against the expansion ol Ii r absorptive capacity oi immigration in the future. The Arab States could nol -top the implementation of this project, so they have decided to sabotage it by arbitrarily deflect ing the Jordan tributaries in Syria and in the Lebanon One can not know with an> measure of certainty whether the Arab States actually intend investing hundreds of millions of dollars in a project that can brine, no benefit m themselves but only harm the state of Israel l he Is rael Government, however, has deemed itself Called Upon tO make it clear to them and to the whole world that it would regard an) infringement ol its water rights as an infringement of its iron tiers and would take action accordingly. The State ol Israel will not permit it; development to be dependent on the good will, or the anim sity of her neighbors. b.ael is convinced that the safest guarantee tor the preservaContinued on Page 13-C VISION NOW A REALITY National Water Works Source of Great Pride Israelis are apt to wax lyrical when they gel onto the subject it their reccntly-completid National Water Carrier. They speak r| it as the "fulfillment of 8 (beam ol man) decades" and as the realization cf the Biblical pi. phecies about .streamflowing in the desert and the wilderness being transf. med into a garden. It is the understandable rea.tion of a people by long tradition wafer minded, surrounded on ever) side by pesters exhorting them to "Save Water!" Semi-Arid Country For Israel, a long narrow strip i : territory on the Eastern Mediterranean seal) ard. is a semiarid country whose winter rainfall is fairly ample in the north i-io Inches in an average yean. sparse in the centre (8 inches 1 and dwindles to almost nothing in the south i ] 1/4 indies, i of its 8.0(H) square miles, only about one quart) r is arable, being depen I out on irrigation tor sound cultivation. The bulk ol this potentially cultivable land is ill the arid s nth. a ti iar ".ilar-sbap.I desert called 11.e Negev, wait i covers halt el |he CO mil y Wide open spaces. '4oad sod and r.J water  thai is what the Negev consists of. Pot yet 9, Israel planners have been 1 oking to this desert: and what they saw in their mind's eye w as a granary, Now, something of that vision is being made into a reality. What the planners s.iught to do. and what they at.ually accomplished in June oi la 4 year, was to initiate a flow ot .surplus waters In m the north to thp dry south. It in billy Callilee that most of the country's water resources are lo be fund, their total annual average being estimated at 1.500 Continued on Page 6-C ISRAEL PRIME MINISTER LEVI ESHKOL J/i/ur 5 194S-1965 J\L

PAGE 1

t, April 30, 1965 +JenistincredHafi Paqe 113 Friedmans Announce Troth of Rosalyn To Law Student Charles Bryan Stuzin MS. STEVEN DWOSKIN ible Ring Rites Crawford, ven Dwoskin foi mer Wendalyn Louise | 5225 Alhanibra Circle, the bride 11 Sloven DwosSaturday evening, Apr. 24, nple Beth Am, Rabbi Herbert bard officiated at the double eremony. ghtcr of Mrs. William J. Mor lanil Stanley J. Crawford, the Jis a graduate of Southwestf^li School. bridegroom graduated from High and attended MiamiJunior College. He is the I.Mr, and Mrs. Harry Dwoakin, hv Huh si. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Friedman. 237 Velarde Ave., Coral Gables, announce the engagement of their daughter, Rosalyn Brenda. t o Charles Bryan Stuzin, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Stuzin. 3710 Toledo St., Coral Gables. She'll Mary Philadelphian Mr. ana Mrs. Al S:hor. 1664 NK % 158th St.. announce the engagement of their daughter. Phyllis M. Schor, i to Louis Small, of Philadelphia, Pa.. son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Small. The bride-to-be rttcndrd schools m Miami, and graduated from the University of Florida in December She is now teaching in Carol City Elementary. The groom-to-be attended schools in Philadelphia, including Temple l University. An Aug. 8 wedding is planned. A summer wedding is planned. The bride-elect will he graduated from the University of Miami in lune, with an AB in English. She Is a member of Orange Key leadership honorary, Sigma Delta Tail Sorority, and received the award for outstanding freshman at the university. She earlier attended -ephic Newcomb College of Tulane University. Mr. Stuzin is in his first year at the University of Miami Law School. He is a graduate of the University of Florida, with a BSBA degree in accounting. At the university, he was a mem. ber of Varsity Debate, Alpha Kappa Psi, and president of his social fraternity. .Alpha Epsilon Pi. MISS NirUfS SCHOR 'ool Opens To Membership ing pool of the YMol Florida, the pool has been overler Miami, 8600 SW lauled and iin excellent condition will be officially opened for the vide range of swimming use ol members beginning programs thai the "Y" will offer. I was announced by A. In charge ol the pool operation Cutler. for the Y" will be Daniel Cavaif i: : esl III the state naugh, swimming coach, OPEN THE DOOR TO A "FUN" SUMMER at the Great DEAUUILLE CABANA CLUB MOTEL Enjoy a lull season of pleasure and entertainment .it the world's finest Cabana Club, private beach and Olympic pool  PLUS: all the enteitamment privileges of the Hotel of the Stars'' including the fabulous "CAVALCADE OF BROADWAY" dinner shows of a new hit musical production, with full casts, each week  V' hours of sheer delight "Music Man", "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes", and "Call Me Madam"... and bingo, wiener roasts, cocktail parties, Special Holiday Parties and MORE! # Coll: JOHN FAZIO Cabana Manager UNION 5-8511 ON THE OCEAN AT 67th STREET MIAMI BEACH suddenly ... fl's MOTHER'S DAY May 9th Be ready  Order Her l'lowers PROMO  NOW  TOO A'I S WE ABOl T SMI) 0\ Ol TOFTOlT\ ORDERS PLACED by WEDNESD n. HAY % ',. h&it Gorans CORAL GABLES 6*5 5867 FT LA'JDFRDALE 371-7JM MIAWI 635-4516 MIAMI F'ACH 532-3361 HOLLYWOOD 94 5-7051 Schissell, Dimond Plan Marriage Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Schissell. of Brooklyn. N.Y.. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Ann, to Alan Theodore Dimond. The groom-to-be is the son of Mrs. Helen Dimond and the late Solomon Dimond. of Alexandria, Va. Announcement ot b*te engagement was made at the first Seder in the i.e. me Of Mr. and Mrs M II. I! senhouse, 5035 Delaware Ave Miami Beach. The S:hi-:scll.s have been houseguests of the Kosenhcuses. Mrs. Schissell and Mrs. Rosenbouse are sisters. The hridc-to-be will receive her B: dhelor Of Education degree from the University of Miami in .June. She is a member of Sigma Delta Tail Sorority and Orange Key. Mr. Dimond is a government major, and will also be graduated from the U. of M. in June. He is past president of Phi Sigma Delta Fraternity and a member of Omega Honorary. He will enter law school HI September, Mr. and Mrs. Rosenhouse have been official hosts to Miss Schissell luring her stay al the University ol Miami. Agudath Achim Receives Gifts It' uben .1 Kover, \ Ice resident ol Congregation Agudath \< i*m, HHIAve has presented the congregation with an Eti 'rial l ight. A Ten Commandments Plaque d ne in raised gold lett ring has bi en presented bj John Post, Sam Weichseibaum, president, is the donor of an elaborate menorab. Metro Debate At Temple Beth Tov "Metro: Without or Without \ Congratulations To Israel BOB NOVACK ORCHESTRAS INSURE THE SUCCESS OF WEDD/NGS  BAR MITZVAHS AND All SOCIAL FUNCTIONS Orchestras-Trios-Accordionists MUSIC  ENTERTAINMENT UNION 6-5434 WOMAN WISHES TO SHARE HER BEACH APARTMENT with lady past 55 years. Low rental to right party. Phone MO 7-7415 ONE OF THE LARGEST CONSERVATIVE CONGREGATIONS IN MIAMI IS SEEKING A SEXTON Must be able to rea* Torah. All replies strictly confidential. P.OB. 844, z-vena Visto Station aicipalitics?" was the topic oi .Itbate when Metro Commissions Alex Gordon and Earl Starni n Morth Miami Mayer Elton GisSi lanner and Franklin Parson, tcrney for Dade County I. ''ague Municipalities, recently at TVnu Beth Tov. Prof. G. Serino, University of imi Department of Governme DOderated the debate which w ponsored by Southwest B r a n c GENTLEMAN DESIRES WORK, LODGING AND BOARD in tine home, general maintenance, j I painting, electrical, mechanical, j 'etc. Recently arrived in U.S.A.. i (peaks French, Russian and broken! *cnnlih. W' : G.D.. Box 2973. i I Miami, Fla. 33101  MISS BARBARA SCHISSCU for Spotless Beauty! PRATT a LAMBERT CELLU-TONE SATIN Try this smooth, durable, semi gloss finish on walls or wood work that need repeated washings. Srrub away dirt, spots and stains easily without harm to .olor or luster. Odorless-type alkyd base. Conies in beautiful, exclusive Pratt & Lambert Cal ibrated Colors". 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^Jewish Floridian Combining THE JEWISH UNITY and THE JEWISH WUKLY 38 Number 18 Miami, Florida. Friday, April 30. 1965 Three Sections  Price 2C< Ecumenical Statement In Vast Revision Now tuns. CHARLES flUKELSTEIN BISHOP COLEMAN f. CARROLL iisliop Carroll, Mrs. [inkelstein Chosen Outstanding Citizens' riNENTAI CONGRESS' /Y Nixes  Bishop ColcUMUl F. Carroll and Mrs. CAailss Finkelstein were Wednesday selected as D.ide County's lutstanding Citizens lor 1964. 'IV ]8t'.i annual presentation was nadc Wednesday before a capacity uoon luncheon at the Everglades NEW YORK  (JTAi  Lead ers of American Jewry wete shocked and highly disappointed this week to learn that the draft declaration approved at the Ecumenical Council last November, exonerating the Jew's >t any collective responsibility for the crucifixion cl Jesus, had been drastically revised by an ad hoc commission ol four at toe Vatican, despite the tact that it was adopted at the Council by a vole ol 1,992 to 99. The declaration, as adopted last November against the opposition of ultra-conservative prelates and Bishops from the Arab states, had stated clearly that no blame lor the death of Jesus could be attributed to the Jewish people alive in the days of Jesus and '"much less 1 to the Jews of today. However, that draft must be considered for final adoption at the next session of the Ecumenical Council, schc Iuled to convene Sept. 17. before it is promulgated as official Catholic Church doctrine. Continued on Page 11 A -tt CARD1NAI A IN COMMAND 30 Bishops Plan Meeting For Final Draft Writing ROME(JTA) The Vatican's Secretariat fe ; Christian Unity, headed by Cardinal Bea. has exclusive jurisdiction aver the handling id the Declaration on Church Relations with Non-Christians, a spokesman for the Bea secretariat declared here Sunday. The statement was an obvious response to dispaU.'ies from Rome Sunday, which reported tha. an ad hoe commission of prelates has been planning drastic revisions of file D e e la r a t i o n, preliminarily ;:.iopt( i'la t Novi Tiber by the third session if ,h,Ecumenical Council. The Declaration as passed in NoContinued on Page 6-A uio vide mfab Nod |S ixti i o N  (JTA)  |l : \mer an Revolu. Ith "Continental ted this week But ising United States il ihe United Nations pti in oi i lenocide. vote on the convention, itlaw the destrucu i.iI racial minorii 12 I 134. The resoluM"-' I tin S.-nate to continue : i" ratifj the treaty. It has |p n ii. b; tore the Senate years, althou.'i ratified bv Continued on Page 8-A Hotel. Florida Secretary of State rom Adams was guest speaker. Presiding at the function was Sanford Swerdlin, permanent se.cretary of the Culstanding Citizens Award Alumni Committee. Mikirg the presentations was Jcseph Liptcn, president of Dade Federal Savings and Loan Association, annual patron. Sholem Lodge of B'nai B'rith, .Milton Hahn, president, is sponsor i the yeai ly event. Bishi p Cain II was named to re c-tive the award "for his Inspiring leadci .'up in the field ol human relations" Bishop Carroll. 60. is a native ol Pittsburgh. As first bish p Cl the new Diocc.-c ol Miami, formuly a part of the Diocese of St. Augustine, he tcck on the giganticContinued on Page U* World Leaders Recall Warsaw Ghetto Battle \ockwell Throws His Hat Va. Governor's Ring BMAXD. Va. (JTA) Rockwell, head of the lean Xa/i Party, will be qualiI run ; % a candidate for Gov|"f Virginia in the November p'ls ii the 255 petitions.pn his arc ic ;md to be registered l MI i. siate authorities Ith eck. Davis, i xecutive secretary Bi nil ii Elections, II  'I would be qualified Pt t" the validity of the names  P-'tilion. The support of 2">0 d v ters is required. JCkwell't petitions were sign|V 235 citiiens. Rockwell said he would obtain additional signatures s  precaution, in case seme of the names already submitted are found to be unqualified. He filed as an independent candidate, rather than on an openly-proclaimed Naii Party ticket. Seme surprise a s expressed II the state capital that 255 Virginians were apparently willing to dvecate a candidate who is identified with Nazi m and anti-Semitism. Wli'le an extremist fringe was known to secretly back the Nazi. il was not thought that so many n ima vou'd sign his petition. said Dr. Lcebke, "will be proven by deeds alone. What happened under Hitler was not done with Ihe knowledge or under the instruction of the German people, but in our name. If Germany should fail a second time, then nobody could use the excuse that he knew nothing about what went on." Leaders of the French Government, including President Charles de Gaulle, toak part in Paris on Sunday in commemorative services marking the 20th anniversary of ,;, pants in he meeting were rep; ibtMa(ion o( many of he Nazi rc-sentatives ot anti-.\azi and re, % latanc  fighters associations from : concer.Nation camps. Gen. de virtually every free country in Eu. Gaulle attended special services at rope A separate ceremony was Nctre Dame Cathedral while Prime held later at a in niuneiit dedicated :o the 30.000 Jews who lost their lives in Bergen-Belsen camp. BONN (JTA)  West Herman President II sinrich Luebke declared here Sunday that trials of Nazi war criminals must c; n.inue and thai "no rcpu -ins ol the truth ol what happened under the Nazi regime c uld in lp. because the world realizes that Germany MI i ( usly desires to repent, and the ueiid has confide nee today in the new Germany." President Luebke was the principal speaker at a rally commemo. lating the 20" ii anniversary of the Id ration of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Among the par"Self-purification in Germany," Minister Georges Pompidou and twe other members of the Cabinet parti, ipated in rites conducted at Continued on Page 13-A AUGUSTIN CARDINAL BtA Bourguiba 9 s Call Disrupts Arab Unity JERUSALEM< JTA >The statei. cuts i .led by Tunisian President l'-bib Bourguiba, calling for peace talks between the Arab states and Isu'l. have "disrupted the Arab Bummit atmosphere," the daily newspaper E! Hayat. ol Beirut, declared this week. Bourgulba's peace proposals, said Ihe newspaper, "pose the question whether Leb:.non can risk the dangers inherent Continued on Page 5-A Bond Drive Opens on Sunday SEE INOtPtNDtNCt SUPPLEMENT PAGE 8-9-C Greater Miami will celebrate the anniversary cf Israel's 17th year :f statehood at an Israel Independence n.iy Dinner [his Sunday evening at the Fontaincbleau Hotel. '1'ie dinner will be the occasion for the official inauguration Rabbi Leon Kroni-h as chairman fyar ISRAEL'S SEVENTEENTH ANNIVERSARY OF INDEPENDENCE ISSUE 5... 1948-1965 ...3 Israel Bond leaders in tJ2 countries. The award to Rosen, "in recognition of his dynamic role in carying Miami's Bond sales to record levels," will be made by E. Zev Sufott, emissary of the State el Israel. Sufott will also conduct the inauguration ceremonies of Rabbi Ki mish. cuest speaker will be U.S. Sen. .! :in 0. Pastore, Ol Rhode Is-land. a leading champion ol Israel in the Senate, and Chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy, who was President Lyndon B. Johnsons personal choice as keynote -peaker at the Democratic Party National Convenlh n las; si nimcr. A coterie of distinguished community leaders heads t ie Israel Independence Day Dinner Committee. spearheaded by Chairman Leonard Rosen: honorary chairContinued on Page 5-A

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A?''30. 1965 +Jt-nlsf> tlorldian Page 13-B $ar Ee Israel Will Mark Law Day vill he observed with It" >:. : .ill Eve service|e Isr. el 11 Greater Mi bay, it as announced by Biirt .Indue II a r o I (I 15 lirmi i Temple Israel's Committee, lation to join the Reform tngrega lion's IKO lawyers lp i (Mended to Dade's |> i attorneys of all Bid Dr Joseph R. Narot, written an original serwill also preach to the Dade County judges III jurisdictions will be Temple Israel at a dinding the services in the Wolfson Auditorium. sowing serve on the Law littec ot Temple Israel: Baki ISannack, William I. Alvin Cassel. David P. iBarl I Cohen. Mrs. Reba Wncr, Joseph I. Davis, lich, Ben Essen. Hirold Friedman. Mrs Kstelle Furlong. Richard Gerstein. William E. Gladstone, Larry i Hoffman, Lewis Horwitz, Michael Isenberg, Aaron Kanner, Samuel .1 Kanner. Walter C. Kovner, Laurence S. Levenson, Paul II. Marks, Judge J. N Morris. Kenneth Myers. E. Albert Pallot. Morris Rosenberg, Morris Salomon. Herbert N. Schwarz, Michael Shores. Sydney L. Weintraub, Henry 1). Williams. Young Israel Collegia tes Meet First in a series of fund-raising affairs sponsored by Young Israel ICollegiate* will be a "Fun and Game Ni'iht" (-11 Sunday, May 9, beginning at p.m.. in the Hebrew Academy Proceeds from the event are earmarked for charily, and the affair will feature pentn arcade games and refreshments Judah Ever is in charge of information.  MIAMI'S NEWEST CHINESE RESTAURANT T he (Zkina JMaiJ SERVING AUTHENTIC CHINESE FOOD! 340 Bird (S.W. 40th St.) Ph. 226-0331 bi piete DINNERS from $1.25 Also Have A Complete Take-Out Mi 10 P.M. SUNDAY 1 lo 9 P.M. (Closed Tuesdoy) AIR-CONDITIONED gogue, Gary Steven Winston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Winston. 188 Shore Drive South, will be Bar Mitzvah. Gary' is a seventh grade student at Shenandoah Junior High, where he plays clarinet in the school band. lie attends Beth David Religious School. Gary also plays the piano, organ and saxophone. Other interests include baseball and basketball. His father is a judge on the Miami Beach Boxing Commission and a former president of the Miami YMII.V Mr. ami Mi>. Winston are tendering the congregational Kiddush following servici s in honor of Gary. In the evening, the} will host a formal Bar Mitzvah dinner in Spectir Hall at Beth David Gary's grandmother, Mrs. Fan nie Weinstein, ol Brooklyn, will attend the celc bration Steven Kipnis I'.,; Mitzvah Ol Steven, sou of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kipnis. will I sen ed oh Saturday, May 1. at Temple Emanu-EI. Steven, is a seventh grade sturent at Nautilus Junior High. Interested in sports, he won an award in the United Slates national summer camp rillery contest for chil dren under 1-4 years of age. Grandparents, Mr. and Mrs lrving Kipnis and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schechter, will be among those attending Steven's Bar Mit/.vah. The celebrant will be honored at a Kiddush in Sirkin Hall following the ceremony, and at a reception Saturday evening at the Seville Hotel. t Jack Goldstein Jack Ronald Goldstein will be Bar Mitzvah on Saturday morning. \tn> 1. at Temple Beth Am. A seventh grade student at Pal me; to Junior High. Jack is active in the school sports program and plays alto saxephone in the band. Mr. and Mis. Harold Goldstein. 11U40 SW 61st Ct., will honor then son at a luncheon reception following the service. Victor Lasoff On Saturday. May 1. Victor Lasill will he Bar Mitzvah during aft erhoon services at the Israelite Center. \ seventh grade honor student a: Shenanddah Junior High, Victor also attends Israelite Center Relig H us School, "her.' he i> a member ,,: the Junior Youth Croup Sun ol MrRuth Lasoff and i.ii:il-on ,-i Mr % id Mrs Charles fti* th Warren Jtckman Michael Burk Niedman. the celebrant will be honored at the Shalosh Seudoth following services. f. tWarren Jackman Religious services at Temple Sinai on Saturday morning. May 1. will include the Bar Mitzvah of Warren, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Jackman. Warren is an eighth grade student at Jchn F. Kennedy Junior High, attends Temple Sinai Religious School, and is interested in all sports Janet Bush Bas Mitzvah of Janet Uene. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Bush, 5165 v \\ 5th si will he observed during Friday evening services, Apr 30, at Flagler-Granada Jewish I 'enter. Janet is a .--eventli made honor student at Kin loch Park Junior High and has attended PlaglerGranada Religious School for eight year.-. Her hobbies include art. music and sports 'Hie celebranl will be honored ;it a Kiddush following services. Grandparents, Mrs. Minnie Kaplan. Miami Beach, and Mrs Celia Bush, New York, will be among Jantl Bush Sttven Kipnis 100 TO THE STATE Of ISRAEL ON US >7*h ANNIVERSARY DADE CAFETERIA (ring "LUNCHEONS" ior Business Men and Women >*> from Columbus Hotel at 111 N.E. Third Avenue We Salute the State of Israel Bonfire Restaurant jlCKORY ROASTED FOOD OVER OPEN BON-FIRE KING ARTHUR'S COURT STROLLING VIOLINS DINNER SUPPER MIAMI SPRINGS VILLAS 500 Deer Run  TU 8-4521 ART BRUNS, Co-Owner those attending the celebration. In the recent essay and art contest sponsored by the Bureau of Jewish Education. Janet won honorable mention for her sculpture ot Chaim Wei/mann. % % ray 1. at Temple Zion. Gary, son of Dr. and Mrs. Murray Heiken. 6017 SW 13tll Terr., will be Bar Mitzvah. Gary is a seventh grade Student at West Miami Junior High and plays the trumpet in the school b;*nd lie is also interested in coincollecting. Mr. anil Mrs. Louis Heiken are visiting here from New York City to help celebrate the event Barbara Golden Barbara, daughter ol Mr. and Mis. Stanley Golden, lTiitu NE 3rd Ave., will be Has Mitzvah during Friday evening servici -. Apr 30, .* r Temple Adath Yeshurun. An hour, student in the seventh grade al -i< in i Kennedy Junior lii'-ii. Barbara will represent her school in the Count) tp-lim^ Bee competition. A Ki Idt -li reception will follow -i rvices NOW! FAVORED DISHES OF FAMOUS AMERICAN RESTAURANTS Included this coming week are Chateaubriand of New York, Scandia of California, Jacques of Chicago, and other equally popular and noted dining spots. Each evening of the week you may enjoy a different gourmet menu featuring the foods of these restaurants who have entrusted to us their priceless recipes. THE BAYVIEW ROOM DUPONT PLAZA HOTEL Also a l.i carre menu Service 6 ro I I p.m. ner dancing, except Monday. Reservations Frank. 370 8861 DANCING FROM 10 p.m. Hal Rader Orch. Luis Maya, Strolling Guitar, From 6 to 9 Robin Hood biscayne Blvd. at N.E. J6th St. OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH AND DINNER < Thru S.ii. 11:30 .i m. to 2 a.m. Sundiy from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. COCKTA LS From SSc 4 to 6 Hul & Cold Ht.s D'otuv. Reservations 371-2621

April 30. 1965 Jewlsfi ncrkJiar Paqe 3-A If '*' '" % i^l L'ation of imperial importance is made to Samuel Polco-chairman of the Imperial House Combined JewishBi campaign, is shown here receivinq a citation for jidinq volunteer services from John N. Serbin, chairman lidents ot Combined Jewish Appeal. Pollock obtained 'he r.ew contribution received by any volunteer in the 1965 uan. AT $1,287,450 LiVE L NOW lined Jewish Appeal Runs Whopping 'ercent Ahead With Month to Go TWO LEADERS DUE FOR CITATION PACE 12-A Combined Jewish Appaign. with less than a go, is running 10 percent last year, with $1,287,450 nitions received prior to it was announced by Dr. ehrnian. campaign chairrampaiiin closing dinner on lean truly be a victory din]e mainlain this outstanding m by so doing reach our |j 4,l").o80 on behalf of CJA's mee both at home and I' the chairman stated. jbate, the increase in both Ber of contributions nd in the amount raised has been most heartening to all of us. We can point with pride to the fact that with almost a month left in the campaign we have already surpassed our 1963 total campaign total of $1,286,500, and r well on the road toward bettering last year's goal which, was $100,000 above that raised in 1963. "It is important, too. we realize that the 1965 goal is an additional S50.000 above this figure and is the bare minimum necessary for Combined Jewish Appeals 41 agencies to meet their commitments to th community and to the United Jewish Appeal and its agencies overseas. "More and more people are joining in support of our annual campaign, as can readily be seen by the number of contributions we have received thus far. already equaling the 9.700 total pledges' made in last year's campaign. "The goal is well within sight. However, it is this final phase of the campaign which will provide vital assurance that our campaign will succeed in reaching the goal chosen by the Executive Committee, the Campaign Cabinet, and the Board of Governors of our Greater Miami Jewish Federation. "Our dedicated workers realize that there are many outstanding cards t<> be covered in all campaign divisions before May 22. It mUS4 be OUT resolution t:> point our work toward going over the top in the next month so that our Victory Dinner the end ot May will truly be an outstanding occasion. "Many new contributions can be obtained if our volunteer workers contact their prospects and tell them of CJA's needs both at home and abroad," the chairman stated. "Whether it is those we know in the local community who need the services of the Jewish Family and Children's Service, of Mt. Sinai Hospital, of the Bureau of Jewish Education, of the Jewish Vocational Service, of the Jewish Home for the Aged, the YM and YWHA. or those overseas who count upon the United Jewish Appeal and its agencies for new life and freedom, we must not fail them in their hour of need. "A new life and new hope is vita to all who call upon Combined Jewish Appeal, and as chairman, I know that we have received new inspiration through the retelling of the ancient Passover story, and will have this in our mind as we all go to see our remaining prospects. It is not a large job if everyone does his share. "The time is now. The campaign is drawing to a close, and I can not too strongly urge everyone to join in making this an outstanding success by going over our goal on behalf of those whose needs must be met. We are optimistic and have planned a Victory Dinner," he stated. "However, it is in the hands of my friends and neighbors in the community if the,campaign is to ( end by going over the goal for the [ second year in a row. I know that I you are dedicated to the welfare Of your fellow man. and I am certain that once again I will have the lull cooperation ot all in this treat humanitarian endeavor." pOfc pytatr "aus ftnev sin BETH DIN OFFICE RABBI DR. TIBOR H. STERN 1S32 Washington Ave., Miami Bch. JE 1-1969 534-0271 **&£?* etwee PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS FASHION CENTER OF THE SOUTH Largest Selection in Latest Style* tor Men and Women FREE PARKING SPACE IN REAR CONVENIENT TO BUSES 728 LINCOLN ROAD (On the Mall) Phone JE 8-0749 Oculists' Prescriptions Filled CONTACT LENSES RAT PROOFING A Specialty RE6U1AR PEST CONTROt FOR THE HOME AND BUSINtSS FREE INSPECTION TRULY NOLEN EXTERMINATORS Tel. FR 7-1411 600 N.W. 7th AVE. 'I r I! r I r L ACE EMPLOYMENT \ SERVICE FR !>-.M.67 DAY WORKERS $6 FARE HIGH TYPE WEEKLY MAIDS RESTAURANT & HOTEL HELP < All other Canadian whiskies are defeated at Waterloo! (Home of Seagram's V.O.) Our strategy: To make the best whisky in the world. That's why Seagram's V.O. does for you what no other whisky can. It defines smooth once and for all. Light? Of course. m IN WHISM-A BUNO OF SELECIEp WHISKIES. SIX YEUS 010. 86.8 PDOOF. SEAGRAM OISIILLERS CO., N.Y.C. Love notes from the sky via grapefruit Glenn Curtisopenedan aviation jcfcool on a stretch of land near the bay for training pilots during World War I. One of his eager young pilots thought of a novel way of delivering a love note to his girl. He tied it to a grapefruit and dropped it over her home. He had no idea it would go dear through the roof! Residents were little impressed with the first air mail delivery in the area and the school moved out to what is now Hialeah. The Marines landed, took over the training facilities and thus the Marine Air Force was born...on Miami Beach, now 50 years young. remembered by tki bank at the head of the Hal Mercantile National Bank of Miami Beach Member of FDIC WKHINCTON VE ? % I1C0W ROM) MUl

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ge 14-B PJmUi) fhoridH^r Frid ay. April Leaders of '.he Miami Housinq Authority and Jewish Home for the Aged inspect Robert Kinq High Towers, opposite the Oranqe Bowl, the ewest project for the low income elderlv conducted by the Authority. Left to right are Haey Sofge, executive director of 'he Authority; Zavid B. Fleeman, vice president and Building Committee of the Home; Martin Fine, chairman of the Authority and member of the Home s board; Judge Irving Cypen, president, and Maurice Pearlstein, executive director, of the Home. The Miami Housinq Authority has received national acclaim for its housinq projects for the elderly. Aged Home and Miami Housing Authority Consider Housing Needs for Elderly Here \l a special call of Judge In Cypen, president of the Jewish ): Mmfor the Aged, tlu' Hoard of 1 rector of the H me met Sunday the R bert King Hish Towers recentlj completed by the Miami i .usiiiL.' Authority for the low in come elderly. This was the first time in its r -ton that the board held one its meetings away from Douglas ; rdens. Purpose of the meeting was to Hear presentations by Martin Fine, chairman, and Haley Sofge, executive director of the Miami ,' Housing Authority, on the work i :f the Authority, the housing reeds of the elderly in Greater Miami, and the potential role of ne Home in helping to meet the | remand for good, low cost housg for senior citizens. 'ine and Sofge told the group % al High 'I o u e r s is the fifth ( ising project for the eld i j i mplet< (I bj the Authority. All five hdve u total ol 795 units. Including efficien ies, one and two-bedroom! artments. Only those elderlj [ .th a maximum annual income of i S..8CH) are eligible, and the rental I i 53o per month. "There is a wait list of over 1.500. which is; .rowing rapidly, and the Authority o. nnot possibly meet their needs decent, low rental housing," Fine and s:ofge reported. They explained t.hat "these pub lie housing projects are for thi well-aged, who are seeking to mainlain independent living arrange.nents, Good, low rental housing plus a variety of group work programs." they stressed. "helps maintain the dignity and self-respect of the elderly and the prevention of deterioration and breaklown necessitating instftutionalizalion." Fine, who Is also a member of the Homo's board, pointed out that "the develo] ment o( good housing fi r .he elderly and other non-institu,ional services are prime factors in the decrease of applications of the well-aged for admission to homos for the aged, and as a result these homes throughout the nation are becoming primarily ^killed care nursing facilities for the sick ged." i' i j p o n reported to the .illy i.'i yearago, he ll' me H s aware "i these n m ".-Utiilion.il trends and planned 'or the eventual development ii Douglas Gardens ;ia skilled care nursing facility" and that "the Home had just received su.h Ii censure for all of the 221 beds at IS Gardens by the Florida >epartment of Health Sofge and Fine urged "that the Home consider the development of a high-rise for low and middle-income elderly and engage in some pioneering cooperative projects with the Miami Housing Authority." Judge Cypen noted that "the Miami Housing Authority has received national acclaim for its work in the area for housing for the elderly." Other leaders of the Home, including Baron de Hirsch Mover. David Fleiman. Louis Breskr and Jack Popick. said that "the impact of the meeting on the Board of Director* augurs well for the Home's entrance into the field of low cost housing for the aged." Another hig'h point of the meeting was the presentation of a Beautification Award of the City of Miami :n the Home by Miami Vice Mayor Alice Wainwrmht. The award was presented to the Home through Mr and Mrs Sam Resnick "who. by their creativity and zeal during the :>:;st five years, have transformed Douglas Gardens into one of the Hole 1 beaut) spnts 1.1 Greater Miami Judge Harold p, Spaet chairman 'I the Homo Admission Commit ti e, presented a rep rt on the 11: me'.service statistics in 1964 In 1964." he said, -the Home admitted 84 residents Since the completion of the Abun Memorial expansion late in 1963, .1 total <>i 150 residents had been admitted I :>e occupancy rate in 1964 was 98 percent The largest proportion oi residents was In the 75 to 7!i age group, with 94 residents over BO yean Ol age. The ratio of women to men was 2.5 to 1 The total number of inquiries regarding admission to the Home in 1964 was 598." Irvinq Pietrack and his orchestra have been chosen to perform at the third annual convention dinner of the Florida State Council for Senior Citizens on Saturday eveninq at the Everglades Hotel. Featured with the orchestra will be Adele Stone, soprano, and Joseph Malek, tenor. Chief Headley Feted at Tribute In Dinner Key Miami 1'olnc (hot Walter Head '.ey was honored at a tribute dinnei S.turday night al Dinner Key Au litorium. The tribute marked Headley's 17 /ears of service as a law enr o:cement officer here fleadlej was name I chief on Aug 11. 1948. Headley was bom in Philadelphia on May 11, 10S. In 1923, his family moved to Florida. In February, 1937, he joined the then 120-man Miami Police Force. Headley made detective in 1940. Following duty with the FBI. he returnul to the Police Department as administrative assistant to the chief of detectives in 1943. He attended the School for Police Administration at Northwestern University. I'pon graduation, he was named Miami's first director of police training. Prior to his appointment as ohief. he established Miami's first police academy. Organ Recital Sunday A concert to the public at no charge will be given Maj > at th.' Victor Recital Hall. \\V 54th St and 3rd Ave., by nationally known organist Don Kingston, of the Conn Organ Co, Tune is 4 (mi The Hall, sponsored by the Victor Piano and Organ Co.. will offer a series oi concerts overj week on Sundays throughout the summer  ST AEPhi Alumnae Install Officers Alpha Fpsilon Phi Alumnae \sociation (f Greater Miami held installation ceremonies at the Wa terways Restaurant in Coral Gables on Apr. 27 Mrs Howard Katzen, president of the Alumnae Association for the past two years, installed Mrs. Robert Werner as president for the coming yar; Mrs. Morris Futernick, vice president; and Mrs. Albert Morrison, recording secretary Mrs. Charles Krugiick, correspond iing secretary; Mrs. Fred Ober. treasurer. Members at-large for the new term are Mrs. Roy Weissei and Mrs. Richard Helfman. Sharon Leopold Wins Second !n Bible Quiz Sharon, daughter ol Mr and Mrs. Max Leopold, of 17400 NE 13th Ave N Miami Beach, and a student at the Beth Torah Religious .School, % /on second place in the Southeastern Regional Bible Contest held at he Bureau of Jewish Education recently. Sharon, who participated in the ',il le Study Group at Belli Torah (" ducted by Alexander Andron. acuity member, will compete in he national finals to be held in \ou York City on Sunday. She has been on the Honor Roll at lohn F. Kennedy Junior High. od was a recipient ot an award ,11m the ScienceFoundation The Bible Quiz, now in its fifth ear, del I throughout tl e United ttates, with the first prize a trip 1 Israel, Sharon will be the sec nd to r< present Beth Tor li 11.01 nail) Jonathan Sriamrus represented the si bind in the first annual Bible Contest Sharon complete l five years ol Hebrew study at Beth Torah and is a member ol Bmanuel Feder's pro confirmation cl 1-James Beard Receives Top Swiss Award The Switzerland Cheese Association has presented its award of N nor. tin-olden Arbah'te. to James Board, distinguished gourmet The Arbalete, or crossbow become the Swiss symbol for freedom, independence and .( h evi ment, and has also connto en.! n: e the idea o| qualit) Read James Hoard's recent hook. ''Delights and Prejudices," and you gain an insight into the man everyone knows as one of the nati n's host known and most ad mired gourmets  articulate, with very definite opinions about food and wines and their preparation and sen ice. James \u aid m a kes the word "gourmet" come to life. Whenever he has traveled, he has brought to his teaching a vitality he comniuni cates to those who would learn tinart 01 preparing good food perfect l> To many people, the word "gourmet" conjures up visions of ethereal dishes too difficult for mortal man. or woman, to attempt. But not after talking with James Heard  he delights in foods in their natural state, fresh seafood, excellent cheeses enjoyed out of hand, a beauttfutty-cooked tender li.tle chicken Hi in/ Hofer. manager of the Switzerland Cheese Association. made the presentation "as a token ot appreciation and thanks for his outstanding services in the vast field of fine food and its culinary perfection."  ST. Mayor Snyder, Greene Reelected Mayor Arthur Snyder was reelected to his post by North Miami Beachites in ballotting on Tuesday. Snyder beat Dan Diefenbach by 3,037 to Diefenbach's 2,750. Harold Greene won a full twoyear term over Stanley Falke by 2.981 to 2.557 to be returned to the City Council. Orthodox Youth Map Convention National Conference of Synagogue Youth will hold its annual Southern Region convention this weekend at the Waldman Hotel. The Apr. 30 to May 2 function will feature the following program;  Registration on Friday. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.  Executive meeting and resolutions. Friday, 3 p.m.  Keynote address Friday at 9 p.m.  Banquet on Saturday. 9 p.m Miami Beach Mayor Melvin Richard will speak and read a letter of greeting from Gov. Burns  Flections and resolutions Sundi y. 11 a.m. Study leading to the be cation end develop^ the unci ediotski cordina to N pot: Improvement C mittee. G ":hiiM| president of the Interim can National Bank, and, also been elected to L board of the Chomberj Commerce. Next r.seaJ the Improvement Conn is scheduled for next 'm nesday at Inter American | tional Bank on Sunnv 1 Blvd. Judea Students To Take Part In Fri. Service On Friday evening, dm] p.m. sen it 1  at Tempi* fifth year Hebrew class will graduate and partictpi family worship services Fern, daughter of Mr. Sidney Deiitsch, will do thee l>h ->,!_ Charles, son of I Mrs Jerome Modell. and Mi of Mr and Mrs Melvin! v ill conduct the seme*. Stuarl -"ii of Mr and Mrs 1 uel Serkin. will deliver the J mon I ii iik son oi Mr mil % utsch. will chatj Kidd I Mr ail Meyci \ Baskin, nil! otoj 'inn PALMER / MEMORIALS "Miami 0/y It "hi Atonumcvf Mum 1 SERVICt, (Mffl AND MMW Scheduled UB**S SUNDAY, MAY 2, I* Mt. Nebo Cf'"r DR. MURRAY M.RECK50*'"| % '.. Alt. Sinai & % *> CHARIES BRAWMTM'"M v.... Sff WHAT m 0 00 NOT BUY FROM* ORDER FIRMS AND' SORRY' Buy Direct from^ facturerinMioK"* save ma1 **" PALME"' 5 mm ****** Jnvlsfc Mw'' 3279 S.W. 8* J P44m**8***

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Page 8-B (Mettisft flcrMiairi Frid. a Y. April 30,. 600 ATTEND THIRD SEDER CELEBRATI ON Miami Medical Center in Beersheba Cited By Undersecretary of Labor John Henning % Pt ilore than 800 S ith Florida com initj leaders heard United States i(i-i en "... i I Labor Jthn F.  ning praise the establishmem the G eater Miami Rehabilita Medical Center in Beersheba, iel, as l.he> gat lered for the anil Third S ler celebration in mi i!i ach -pon.red b) the Greater Miami i uncil for Mi di< al Sen ices in Isr. K v ioi.:n. the dinner meet, ai the Fontainebaaau Hotel ised more than $38,000 to pur. ;.>e medical equipment for the ersheba Center. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rifkin, of Miami Beach, honorees at the Third Seder, were joined by Mr. and Mrs. David Rifkin, of Wilkes barre. Pa., in a surprise announcement that each couple was : ontributing $6,000 to the Rehabilation Medical Center. rhe local Ritkins. industrialists der Celebration. Moe Levin, chairman of the Arn ngemeots Committee tar the dinr. and chairman of the Executive Committee of the Israel Histradrut c -mmitteo of Greater Miami, ex iided greetings and inUoduced } opkk. Cantor David Conviser. of Temple tli Sholoni (,f Miami Bea.'i. and special clK'ir presented a modern nditicn of the llagnaddah. which mbined traditional Hebrew songs th modern Israeli music. Popick reported on his recent Mother's Day Celebration Set Mizrachi Women of America. Hakvah Group, will celebrate Moth's Day at the Royal Hungarian eataurant on Tuesday noon. Proceeds will be used to support T e "Save a dild" project in Isel. Mizrachi Women focus their lention on religion-, secular and dustrial training, thus keeping step with Israel's needs. Mrs, Morris Bienenfeld is overI chaiiman of the annual project. rs. Jacob D. Davis is chairman of le day. trip to Israel, during which he visited the Beersheba Center and attended the meeting of the Board of Governors of the Hebrew University cf Jerusalem, on which bcav he sits. Pcpick joined L'ndi secretary Henning in lauding the role of Kupat Holim in providing medical services fcr more than two-thirds ol the population of Israel Sam Feinstein, president of the Israel H;sT;:dut Committee, extend* ed greetings. Mrs Anna Brenner Meyers, honorsrj chairman of the Third Seder and receipienl 'chaiiman: United States UnderseaeJ Labor John F. Henning; Mrs. Popick MnV cob Rifkin; Mis. David Rifkin; Jacob S henoree along with his wife, end DavidLof Wilkes-Barre, Pa., brother of the "o^ Metro Mayor Chuck Hall extended greetings in behalf of the counts. Rabbi Leon Kronish, honorary chairman of the Greater Miami Council for Medical Services in Israel, presented a special award to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rifkin for their "generosity and foresight in dedicating their lives to their fellowman and in particular for establishing the department." physiotherapy Hal,hi Kronish praised the role of Moshe Rerman. executive director 11 the Greater Miami Israel Hista rirut Committee here, in establishing the Beersheba Medical Center "and in influencing leading Com nuinal personalities to support the import. iiit project L'nders ireiar> Hem quenl visit i ;,. i>rael and aJ thority on the role ol Hi>tad the Middl Easi countrt'ii growth sai : the 17th anm Isri el's independence i in staunch all> in the Mtkbj continuing italmost unbi strides I  self sufndnal total {^oncfratulations to the STATE OF ISRAEL on its I 7th &^vnniv*rs&r\ ^ Tribute Dinner For Post Prexies I I will hold a tribute dinner, honBrotherhood cf Temple Emanuuring past presidents of the or..ni/ation CD Tuesday. 7 p.m., in  i kin Hall. Milton Sirkin. presi% ent of the Brotherhood, anxinced. Those to be feted are Joseph -below. Jules P. Channing, Judge ving Cypen. Allen Goldberg. Hj1 in Kout, Dr. Herman R. Mechloit7 and Michael Sossin. Reservations are being accepted ; the temple eft ice and by chair lan Ben Cypen. ( ront MITCHELL WOLFSON President MILTON WEISS Chairman of the Board M 9 'i Bmck in Swim Henry Moreno, who spent 40  i*ars at se t a before retiring to his Coconut Grove home last year, is mnr back "in the swim" at Miami springs Villas as assistant catering manager, Art Bruns, of the Villas, aid that Moreno put to sea as a ro-year-o!d junior purser. His last cost at seas as executive purser hoard the SS United States, where he oversaw 26 galleys and pantries. S.T. MIAMI BEACH [FEDERAL l SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MAM orncr. Liacato laat Mail at Waskinfton Avenue IW11 % tANCH OFFICES 7M WmttBgm kti, MMai leach .115511 260 Sunny tslts levtmrd, Mia*I Wl M

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. April 30, 1965 +JfnisHlf>rikftor Page 15-A ggpaiMMMMMMMimiRMnNnaMMMMMMamM A Sick Chief By MAX LERNER Top U.S. Diplomat in Israel JCow that both houses of Congress have passed versions of the IBayti-Collcr Amendment on the succession to the Presidency, we I all lirt'ailip more freely when a conference group irons out the dil Ice* and when three-quarters of the states ratify the amendment, anniversary of FDR's death and the centenary of Lincoln's Inatlon, both in a single week, remind us again that Presidents nortal The amendment is a sensible one in providing that the [president shouki nominate a man to fill the vacant Vice Presikal chair and that a majority vote of both houses will make him [president. It mipl'l be argued that a Vice President succeeding to the Presi k should hold it only for an interim period until a special elec [car be held, on the ground that he might be a mediocre man i sin event that no one should sit in the White House unless he (een directly elected to it. But this could be cumbersome and un | ng. The burden should be placed on the national parties to pick I [vice Presidents as well as Presidents. Increasingly we are com% understand that every year we elect not just one President but the second a spare  and that both had better be good enough i I entrusted with the awesome power of the Presidency, potentially j active as well as creative. Ve need to make a fight soon to ratify the amendment, in every But the crunch of it lies not in the problem of a Presidents h. but of his "disability" or "inability" to discharge his office. the crunch of that crunch  if I may use a barbarism  has to do (mental disability rather than physical illness. The new amendment says that if a President is too sick, physic]  mentally, to give way to the Vice President, the decision that he ; able to continue can only be made by the Vice President with a rity of the Cabinet; That it will take the same group to override kktci I seeking to resume his office, and  on a showdown  that ill need two-thirds of Congress as well. In a complex problem strikes me as a procedure preserving an effective succession guarding against a possible usurping cabal. To those who fear that ens the door to a revolution by a Latin American Junta, the role he two-thirds Congressional majority should be an adequate pie doubts remaining in my mind don't involve the amendment, he problem it-elf, which has become almost an insoluble one. We the high incidence of mental breakdown in modern urban upcultures, under today's tensions. We know that the ordinary ons are multiplied in the White House. We know that in an age kerkill weapons, the head-of-state. whether in Russia, America. re and presently China has immense power for destmctiveness. ily we know, as Dr. Mortimer Ostow pointed out in an important in the Times last Oct. 11, that "destructiveness is an intrinsic onent of all mental illness." It know these things, but there remains the question of when a i ill enough to be dangerous to the nation and the world. Many of neurotic in one way or another, but when can a President be ged psychotic? The amendment is based on the theory that the working most closely with him  the Vice President and Cabwould be most likely to sense dangerous changes in him. But en they detect the line between a willful and even arbitrary and a really sick chief  a truly deranged one? And then there I Question (raised in the Ostow letter) about a character disorder, Wear insanity, which may lead him to destructive policies as [Hitler and Stalin. The problem then is not the fabled one of who will bell the cat: amendment is clear on that  it is to be the Vice President and bet. #  Presidents then are not only mortal: They are also human, living human tensions, often strengthened by them, sometimes dam It n is true that a man's breakdown is in part related to the pS i i ins work, then I suppose one possible contingency for the Hential office would be paranoia. With his uncanny flare for the per one topic ol the hour. Fletcher Knebel. who gave us "Seven % y," has written a new novel  "A Night of Camp David." | published next month  which deals with exactly that contin% to return to it when i' ipublished, THE WEEK... AS I SEE 17 Continued from Page 4-A Jamly guilty, if only as manifestations of their rebelliousness  If these become more understandable. I B> understandable,'' I of course mean as Soviet methods of Wa to -rips with and neutralizing the Jewish will toward indcpnee. Both independence and rebelliousness are. patently, two racteristics intolerable to the Kremlin. At the outset of the Revolution, history suggests the Jews were peted to be the most natural supporters of the new Soviet society. Philosophic Marxist and Leninist condemnation of anti-Semi'a clear case in point. What has happened since then? And M can demonstrations and petitions do to turn the tide? For some | Words on this, next week. 'rogressing with Our "Many Satisfied Customers" ANOTHER LOCATION FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE COULTON BROS. 'ART" "MAURY" "NAT" YOUR TEXACO BOYS JERUSALEM l JTA) Phillips Talbol, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and African Affairs, conferred this week with Premier Levi Eshkol and Mrs. Golda Meir. Israel's Foreign Minster. No details were given on the talks, but it was assumed that Arab threats to divert Jprdan River headwaters to deny the water to Israel was among the principal tcpics of the talks. It was also assumed that there was an exchange of views based on the American diplomat's talks with President Nasser of Egypt and other leaders he met on his current tour of Arab capitals. Newsweek magazine reported that "the United States was negotiating a deal with Israel, calling for direct shipment of American munitions." According to the publication, the Israelis are expected "to get significantly more weapons from the U.S. directly than they were getting through Germany" to balance the Russian shipments of planes and missiles to Egypt. News Consultant Speaks to Club Democratic Club of Miami Beacli met recently at the Sea Isle Hotel. Guest speaker was Samuel Liebjerman, NBC news consultant. i whose toDic was "The Medicare Bill and the Hospital Problem." Club President Wally Gluck discussed the coming Miami Beach elections and also appointed a cam. paign committee. Foral Way & S.W. 27th Ave. 840 S.W. 8th St. TWIX riTY GLASS IO. 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When they tell you the pleasure facilities are the best COMPARE! Olympic-size swimming pool  tennis courts  shuffleboard courts  18-hole putting green  boat dock and fishing pier  5 beautiful, landscaped acres of gardens. When they tell you, dollar for dollar, you get the most COMPARE! $ 175 only | # ^0 monthly for BIG BEDROOM APARTMENT Deluxe Studio Apartments from $131 PLEASE CHECK THE FACTS When you move to Bay Park Towers we prefer you be positive that YOU COULDN'T DO BETTER! OH BISCAYNE BAY AT N. E 33rd ST MIAMI, FLORIDA  PH. PR 3 3103

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Page 12-C Jwisti rkrtdtor J^day.ApnlJ Miami Federation Greets Anniversary our continued efforts  Jewish men.  to a I if,. Both the Greater Miami Jewish Ft deration and the United Jewish Appeal were established 27 years ago. and ten yearafter. Mr efforts helped in the establishment of the State cf Israel, which is currently celebrating its 17th birthday as an independent and > ibrant young democracy," Sidney Lefcc.ur;. president of Federa. lion, noted this week. "We. of the Greater Miami .lew ish Federation, are extremely proud of she millions of lives that f were saved and are continuing to be saved through our annual philanthropic campaigns. The dollars W8 have raised for United Jewish' Appeal have done mueh toward bringing people from lands of fear and oppression to ;he State of Israel, where they have become useful citizens, making their own important contributions to this yor.ng nation. 'Israel, whose 17th anniversary' we join in celebration, still retains its policy ol taking Jews in from all pans of the world regardless of age. physical, or men tal handicap. Among the 65.000 who will come in during 1905 will he eld. blind and sick people. Israel welcomes everyone as a member of the family and provides them with the opportunity to Start a useful life in a free and independent nation. "We are proud that the dollars raised through our Federation and Combined Jewish Appeal campaign helps \r> provide educai tion. housing, medical care, job retraining, and even teaching of the Hebrew language, so that the newcomers may make the adjustment to become productive and useful citizens of the Stale of Israel. This small nation, whose borders have been surrounded by hostile neighbors, has grown in such a manner as to serve as an example to all newly independent nations. "We, Of the Greater Miami Jewish Federation, take this' opportunity to restate our pride in the growlh and development of the State of Israel, and to pledge "wnwtsj ';" land. May Z be marked .is a anniJ imc ot, progress for the suu "rael. but has also been cited as the greatest voluntary philanthro. pic program at any time in history. We are proud that our Combined Jewish Appeal has contributed almost S13.000.000 to the I i ted Jewish Appeal and its agen< i during t e 27 years of activItj in the Gr ater Miami eommu. oltj "We are proud to salute the State Of Israel and the valiant men. women, and children "ho have overcome tremendous hard ships to build a land of which we can all be justifiably proud. "Mrs. Lehrman and I recently returned from a special mission to Israel and to Europe as the guests of former Israel Prime Minister Mo-he Sharetl. On our tour, we visited all parts of Israel, including small villages, the k i butzim and the big cities. What Impressed us mosl about Israel was the sense of pride and dignity of Us people and the way in which new. mers were made tu feel a[ home. The welcome they received from the Israelis gave a meaning to our Combined Jewish Appeal that cannot be transhit ed into mere words. "The Israelis' full acceptance of newcomers without regard to background, to financial and physical status, was an acceptance of the ancient rabbinical tradition that every Jew is responsible for every other Jew 'Will Pay Back' Tins, to us, is the meaning e,i the State Of Israel an its 17t'i birthdaya meaning we can never forget and which will always be typified by the newly-arrived immigrant who was brought to Israel by Combined Jewish Appeal and United Jewish Appeal funds, and said to me. "Rabbi. we'll pay back everything, everything you have given us to start :i new lite Events Calendar Continued from Page 4-C Nov. 30 TABAI, Africa-Israel Stamp exhibition, opens in Haifa Dec. 14 Dec. 23 Scopus. Dec. 30 Prime Minister Eshkol resigns. Finance Minister presents 1965-66 budget, Jordanian troops wound three Israeli guards on Ml 26th Zionist Congress opens in Jerusalem. 1965 Jan. 3 Danish Prime Minister arrives for official visit. Jan. 15 lordanians lire on Israeli patrol in Jerusalem. Jan. 27 Deputy Premier Abba Eban announces counter-measures against Arab boycott. Feb. 3 UN Secretary General's representatives arrive to investigate tens.on on Jordan-Israel border. Feb. 15 Kin -set condemns Bonn's decision to stop security aid to Isr.v. I Feb. 16 Tenth Convention of Mapai. Israel Labour Party. opens WE CAN PLAN INSURANC TO SUIT YOU! A 32 YEARS OF SUCCESSFUL INSURANCE PLANNING FOR HUNDREDS OF SATISFIED CLIENTS. 998 S.W. 1st St. e Miami Phone 379-7555 "It's n t statistics. It's human beingsmen. women and childrenwho embody this attitude, and who are the real celebrants of this anniversary. On this anniversary ol Israel's Independence, we pledge to redouble our efforts. SO that every man. woman and child seeking a life of freedom can be brought to the State of Israel and settled in this vibrant young nation which is truly an example of democracy and free drill Desks, Chairs, Sofas, Credenzas, Lamps, Everything or the Office of Distinction Hd'/lOW ..." '.'..'' '-' % '; % :!; % I pact pluni^ Optn Saturday!!* V. 2801 Southwest 31st Avmnut Miami Florida TelepKoTf^HlQtilind 4-82< QooduUustc is powerfully influential on SOUTH FLORIDA'S flood cJAusic STATIONS AM-1080 KC NOW 10,000 WATTS FM 105.1 MC  160,000 WATT^ =£.

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Page 2-C *Je*ist) rhrktktr PRIME MINISTER LEVI ESHKOL CHATS WITH YOUTH OF KIBBUTZ DEGANIA BETH. The Role of Levi Eshkol Continued from Page 1-C  later President of Israeli and o hers. After he left the army, he and other members of his group a place where they could settle on the lar.d. and he among the founders of De-jania B. a kibbutz near the southwestern shores of the Sea of Galilee. Eshkol participated in the founding convention of the Hi-tadru:. the General Federation of Labor, in Haifa in 1921. and served as a delegate to the 12th and subsequent Zionist Congresses. He handled Hi?tadrut affairs in Vienna and Berlin, and in 1927 he went to Moscow, together win the late David Remez. as a member of the delegation to the Cooperative Congress. He was also a delegate to the Congress of the Socialist International in Prague At the end of the 1920s, he was a member of the Agricultural Center He was elected a member of the Mapai Central Council and served as party secretary and as a member of the Central Committee. In the early dayof Nazi rule. ho ran the Settlement Department of Palestine Office in Berlin and also acted on behalf of the Hechalutz pioneering organization in Germany, Poland and Lithuania organizing the transfer of immigrants and property from Germany. In 1944. he was appointed Secretary of the Tel Aviv Labor Council. Defense Problem* Levi Eshkol devoted a considerable part of his time to security problems. In various periods, he was active on the high command of the Haganah and served as Haganah treasurer for many years. He also helped to obtain weapons abroad. In 1947. David Ben-Gurion called on him to take up a central position on the Haganah staff, and with the establishment of the State, he was appointed directorgeneral of the Ministry of Defense. .As a member of the Jewish Agency Executive, and as head of its Agricultural Settlement Departtnent since 1949. Mr. Eshkol has been re.-por.sible for the mass V W1W'7 TIN QT1J #i/ ISRAEL AJRLJNES 1602 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach Telephone 532-5441 M ttlement of the new immigrants on the land. Between 1950 and 1952. he was also the treasurer of the Jewish Agency. In 1951. he was appointed Minister of Agriculture and Development, and a year later he assumed the post of Minister of Finance. He has also served as chairman of the Cabinet Economic Commit, tee. As Minister of Finance, he represented Israel at international conferences and meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, as well as in discussions with Eric Johnston, President Eisenhower's special envoy, on plans for the development of water resources. He has visited the United States a number of times, both on government business and on behalf of the United Jewish Appeal and the Israel Bond drive. New Economic Policy In the past decade Mr. Eshkol has been largely responsible for development and economic policy in Israel. He was among the architects of Israel's New Economic Policy, hinged on the devaluation of the Israel Pound in February, 1962. and included the institution of liberalized export-import policies, In recent years, t>>. he wu frequently called upon to si rv< Prime Minister, in Mr  i lei i  and as  r % % ".'  % % n van is part  ion talks and   ins. nation, In Jura i| Mr Bent.'.  Prime Minister and Minister of Defi-r -i Mr Bshki.! was appointed t.. these two posts on June 26. 1963. On Mar. 3. 1964. Mr Eshkol married Miriam Zelikovitch. senior librarian of the Knesset and a long-time friend of the family The Prime Minister has been mar ried twice before and was widowed since December. 1959. He has four daughters. Mr Eshkol speak* English Rus Man and German, as well as Hebrew and Yiddish His book "Be' hevlei Hitnahalut"'Problems of Settlement"  was published in 1959. Newcomers Tew of thousands of immigrants have been arriving annually In the 1. -1 ft w yearsthe total, a quarter of a million. The li.-t of countries in all parts of the globe from which the immigrants came runs into over 70. Frcm some, many thousands arrived; from others only a mere trickle. Israel's Ties Abroad Continue to Exp a Israel's links with the family () nations continued to expand, and her tit < Of friendship and cooperation were fustber strengthened during the seventeenth year of the State's existence. Eminent statesmen from the four comers Of the earth paid friendly visitand Israel's own leading figures further cemented international bonds by their missions abroad There was no sign", however, that the thaw in the Cold War had reached the Middle East. Arab summit conferences were dedi. cated mainly to proje.ts to deprive Israel of her vital water supplies and long-term planning for the attempt to destroy her when the time should be regarded as ripe. Premier Levi Eshkol's visit to the United States at the invitation of President Lyndon B. Johnson the first official visit paid by an Israeli Prime Minister to the United States, was a landmark in the history of the excellent relations that have existed between the two countries since the establishment of the State of Israel. The trip, which lasted from May 31 to June 11. was followed by an official 12-day visit to France on June % % : : % and her French ^ Mrs -WeiroflT te fwogn MaJ 1 % Meir. !" % lland Britain. Be Luxembourg in Man* '"" ""l earlier^, and Italy during j^ talkwith leading % % Mr< Meir -AS recenoii audii   with Quoon Fabiola. hat : rnase to the placein i-rael in : "''the em! of Mrs Meir made a higtih ful t eral ^ i after rer the independence rhi new Republic r>f had -.a\kwith the Kenya Mr JomoKen; '::hor of Se^. President Azikwe of SmJ Eban. ;ster. wa  i during an Continued on Pio'< fll I JjirthdctU \-Jrcctiny? to the State of Israel 0l Hi 17tit JjirtltJay MAY ISRAEL PROSPER AND DEVELOP  CONTINUE TC GROW IN THE SAME STRIDE AS IN THE PAST WITH GOD'S HELP. Jennie Grossinger